Carmine is an artificial colorant commonly used by fraudulent food business participants in black tea adulteration, for purpose of gaining illegal profits. This study combined spectrophotometry with machine learning for… Click to show full abstract
Carmine is an artificial colorant commonly used by fraudulent food business participants in black tea adulteration, for purpose of gaining illegal profits. This study combined spectrophotometry with machine learning for rapid detection of carmine in black tea based on the spectral characteristics of tea infusion. The qualitative model demonstrated an accuracy rate of 100% for successful identification of the presence/absence of carmine in black tea. For quantitative analysis, the R2 between carmine concentrations generated according to spectral characteristics and those determined with HPLC was 0.988 and 0.972, respectively, for black tea samples involved in the test subset and an independent dataset II. Paired t-test indicated that the difference was statistically insignificant (P values of 0.26 and 0.44, respectively). The method established in this study was rapid and reliable for detecting carmine in black tea, and thus could be used as a useful tool to identify black tea adulteration in market.
               
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