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Discrimination and quantification of Moroccan gasoline adulteration with diesel using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and chemometric tools

Journal Contribution - Journal Article

In this work, transform-infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) was associated with chemometric tools, especially principal component analysis (PCA) and partial least squares regression (PLSR), to discriminate and quantify gasoline adulteration with diesel. The method is composed of a total of 100 mixtures were prepared, and then FTIR fingerprints were recorded for all samples. PCA was used to verify that mixtures can be distinguished from pure products and to check that there are no outliers. As a result of using just PC1 and PC2, more than 98% of the general variability was explained. The PLSR model based on infrared spectra has shown its capabilities to be suitable for predicting gasoline adulteration in the concentration range of 0 to 98% (w/w), with a high significant coefficient of determination (R 2 = 99.25%) and an acceptable calibration and prediction errors (root mean squared error of calibration = 0.63 and root mean square of external validation and/or prediction = 0.69).

Journal: Journal of AOAC International
ISSN: 1060-3271
Issue: 3
Volume: 102
Pages: 966-970
Publication year:2019
CSS-citation score:1
Accessibility:Open