RESUMEN
Nondestructive instrumental identification of the green tea quality instead of professional human panel tests is highly desired for industrial application recently. The special flavor is a key quality-trait that influence consumer preference. However, flavonoids, as well as sensory-associated compounds, which play a critical role in the quality-traits profile of green tea samples have been poorly investigated. In this study, we were proposing an objective and accurate near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) profile to support quality control within the entire green tea sensory evaluation chain, the complexity of green tea samples' sensory analysis was performed by two complementary methods: the standard calculation and the novel NIRS roadmap coupled with chemometrics. The green tea samples' physical quality, gustatory index, and nutritional index were measured respectively, which taking into consideration the gustatory evaluation of green tea for five commercially representative overall quality ("very bad", "bad", "regular", "good" and "excellent"). Our findings highlight the underexplored role of NIRS in chemical-to-sensory relationships and its widespread importance and utility in green tea quality improvement. Collectively, the comprehensive characterization of sensory-associated attribution allowed the identification of a wide array of spectrometric features, mostly related to moisture, soluble solids (SS), tea polyphenol (TPP), epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), epicatechin (EC) and tea polysaccharide (TPS), which can be used as putative biomarkers to rapidly evaluate the green tea flavor variations related to rank differences. Otherwise, the NIRS' data were split into the calibration (n = 80) and prediction (n = 40) set independently, which showed high correlation coefficient with Rp-values of 0.9024, 0.9020 in physical and total cup quality, respectively. In this research, we demonstrated that NIRS was an easily-generated strategy and able to close the loop to feedback into the process for advanced process control. However, the established models should be improved by more green tea samples from different regions.
Asunto(s)
Catequina , Té , Calibración , Catequina/análisis , Flavonoides , Humanos , Polifenoles , Espectroscopía Infrarroja CortaRESUMEN
Steaming is a vital unit operation in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), which greatly affects the active ingredients and the pharmacological efficacy of the products. Near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy has already been widely used as a strong process analytical technology (PAT) tool. In this study, the potential usage of NIR spectroscopy to monitor the steaming process of Gastrodiae rhizoma was explored. About 10 lab scale batches were employed to construct quantitative models to determine four chemical ingredients and moisture change during the steaming process. Gastrodin, p-hydroxybenzyl alcohol, parishin B, and parishin A were modeled by different multivariate calibration models (SMLR and PLS), while the content of the moisture was modeled by principal component regression (PCR). In the optimized models, the root mean square errors of prediction (RMSEP) for gastrodin, p-hydroxybenzyl alcohol, parishin B, parishin A, and moisture were 0.0181, 0.0143, 0.0132, 0.0244, and 2.15, respectively, and correlation coefficients (R p 2) were 0.9591, 0.9307, 0.9309, 0.9277, and 0.9201, respectively. Three other batches' results revealed that the accuracy of the model was acceptable and that was specific for next drying step. In addition, the results demonstrated the method was reliable in process performance and robustness. This method holds a great promise to replace current subjective color judgment and time-consuming HPLC or UV/Vis methods and is suitable for rapid online monitoring and quality control in the TCM industrial steaming process.