RESUMO
Vibrational coupling between carbohydrates and the hydration shell is unveiled as the underlying mechanism that improves wavenumber-selectively the carbohydrate discrimination performance by near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy. The investigation is based on measurement of six carbohydrates (fructose, glucose, mannose, ribose, xylose and sorbitol) in aqueous solution in different concentration levels (5â¯mg/L, ~0.03â¯mmol/dm-3 and 20â¯mg/L, ~0.1â¯mmol/dm-3). The results of multivariate classification are interpreted by quantum mechanical NIR spectra simulations. The simulation unveils that the phenomenon is vibration-selective and thus wavenumber-selective, and leads to an enhancement of the qualitative information contained in the specific spectral regions. The location of these regions and the related performance correspond fully to the appearance and magnitude of the unveiled cooperative vibration effect.