Identification and checking of fatty acids in functional foods and cosmetics
Applications | | MetrohmInstrumentation
Quality assurance of functional foods and cosmetic ingredients is critical for both regulatory compliance and consumer safety. Fatty acids and related lipids are widely used in nutraceutical formulations and topical products, but their structural similarities challenge conventional analytical methods. Rapid, reliable verification of these materials helps manufacturers maintain product integrity and avoid costly production delays.
This application note demonstrates how a handheld Raman spectrometer can be applied to identify and verify common fatty acids and a fatty alcohol used in nutraceutical and cosmetic manufacturing. The study compares traditional library matching based on Pearson correlation with a p-value verification approach to assess which method provides higher confidence in distinguishing closely related compounds.
The workflow consists of two complementary strategies:
The instrument used was the Metrohm Instant Raman Analyzer Mira M-3 with ORS technology. Spectra were acquired through MiraCal software using 5% laser power, automatic integration time, and a single replicate per measurement. Custom operating procedures and libraries were configured within the software for both identification and verification routines.
Library matching produced high Pearson correlation indices for correct samples (0.97–1.00) but also yielded similarly high values for structurally related fatty acids, making interpretation ambiguous. In contrast, p-value verification delivered clear pass/fail outcomes for each compound:
This demonstrates that verification models based on PCA and p-value calculations offer superior selectivity compared to simple correlation metrics.
Key advantages of the described approach include:
As spectroscopic libraries and training models expand, handheld Raman verification can be extended to a wider range of ingredients, including complex mixtures and finished formulations. Integration with digital quality management systems and cloud‐based spectral databases will further enhance traceability and regulatory compliance in nutraceutical and cosmetic industries.
This study confirms that while traditional library matching is useful for broadly distinct materials, p-value based verification using PCA training sets provides a robust, user‐friendly method for confirming the identity of closely related fatty acids. The handheld Raman approach thus strengthens quality assurance workflows and minimizes production risks in functional food and cosmetic manufacturing.
RAMAN Spectroscopy
IndustriesFood & Agriculture
ManufacturerMetrohm
Summary
Význam tématu
Quality assurance of functional foods and cosmetic ingredients is critical for both regulatory compliance and consumer safety. Fatty acids and related lipids are widely used in nutraceutical formulations and topical products, but their structural similarities challenge conventional analytical methods. Rapid, reliable verification of these materials helps manufacturers maintain product integrity and avoid costly production delays.
Cíle a přehled studie / článku
This application note demonstrates how a handheld Raman spectrometer can be applied to identify and verify common fatty acids and a fatty alcohol used in nutraceutical and cosmetic manufacturing. The study compares traditional library matching based on Pearson correlation with a p-value verification approach to assess which method provides higher confidence in distinguishing closely related compounds.
Použitá metodika a instrumentace
The workflow consists of two complementary strategies:
- Library Identification: Each sample spectrum is matched against a reference library using Pearson correlation. High match scores suggest potential identity but may not reliably discriminate similar lipids.
- Training‐Set Verification: Multiple spectra (~20) of each target fatty acid are collected to build a principal component analysis (PCA) training set. Unknown samples are tested against this model and a p-value algorithm yields a pass/fail decision at a predefined confidence level (typically 95%).
The instrument used was the Metrohm Instant Raman Analyzer Mira M-3 with ORS technology. Spectra were acquired through MiraCal software using 5% laser power, automatic integration time, and a single replicate per measurement. Custom operating procedures and libraries were configured within the software for both identification and verification routines.
Hlavní výsledky a diskuse
Library matching produced high Pearson correlation indices for correct samples (0.97–1.00) but also yielded similarly high values for structurally related fatty acids, making interpretation ambiguous. In contrast, p-value verification delivered clear pass/fail outcomes for each compound:
- Each training set correctly accepted its matching fatty acid sample within the 95% confidence interval.
- Non-matching samples consistently failed, even when spectral differences were subtle.
This demonstrates that verification models based on PCA and p-value calculations offer superior selectivity compared to simple correlation metrics.
Přínosy a praktické využití metody
Key advantages of the described approach include:
- Non‐destructive, in situ analysis without sample preparation.
- Rapid results supporting real‐time quality control.
- High specificity for closely related lipids, reducing false positives.
- Ease of deployment in production or receiving labs for raw material verification.
Budoucí trendy a možnosti využití
As spectroscopic libraries and training models expand, handheld Raman verification can be extended to a wider range of ingredients, including complex mixtures and finished formulations. Integration with digital quality management systems and cloud‐based spectral databases will further enhance traceability and regulatory compliance in nutraceutical and cosmetic industries.
Závěr
This study confirms that while traditional library matching is useful for broadly distinct materials, p-value based verification using PCA training sets provides a robust, user‐friendly method for confirming the identity of closely related fatty acids. The handheld Raman approach thus strengthens quality assurance workflows and minimizes production risks in functional food and cosmetic manufacturing.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
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