Title: Analysis of port wines using the electronic tongue
1Analysis of port wines using the electronic tongue
- Alisa Rudnitskaya1, Ivonne Delgadillo2, Andrey
Legin1, Silvia Rocha2, Anne-Marie Da Costa2,
Tomás Simoes3 - 1Chemistry Department, St. Petersburg
University, Russia - www.elecronictongue.com
- 2Chemistry Department, University of Aveiro,
Portugal3Instituto do Vinho do Porto, Porto,
Portugal
2Port wine making procedure
3Port wine producing region
4Port wine producing region
5Port wine styles
Ruby Bottle aged
Tawny Cask aged
Ruby, Ruby reserve (2-3 years in the cask)
Tawny, Tawny reserve (min 6 years in the cask)
Tawny with an Indication of Age (10, 20, 30 or 40
years in the cask)
LBV (4-6 years in the cask)
Colheita (min 7 years in the cask)
Vintage (2-3 years in the cask)
6Purpose of the study
- Development of the rapid analytical methodology
for the assessment of the port wine age - Evaluation of the electronic tongue multisensor
system (ET) for the determination of the port
wine age - Comparison between ET and conventional chemical
analysis data for the determination of the port
wine age - Evaluation of the orthogonal signal correction
for the data filtering
7Experimental
- Samples
- 146 samples of port wine, in particular, wines
aged in oak casks for 10, 20, 30 and 40 years,
Vintage, LBV and Colheita (harvest) wines of age
varying from 2 to 70 years. - All port wine samples together with chemical
analysis results were obtained from Instituto do
Vinho Do Porto
- Measurements
- Electronic tongue
- Sensor array of 28 potentiometric chemical
sensors with both chalcogenide glass and
polymeric membranes - Direct measurements without sample preparation
- Chemical analysis using conventional analytical
techniques (provided by Instituto de Vinho de
Porto) - 32 parameters including content of sugar (ºBé),
ashes, reducible sugar, total SO2 and sulphates,
tartaric and malic acids, alcohols (ethanol,
methanol, glycerol, 1 and 2-butanol, 1-propanol,
isopropanol, amyl and allyl alcohols), ethanal,
ethyl acetate, volatile and total acidity, Foline
index, density, dry extract, etc.
8ExperimentalData processing
- PCA
- Recognition of samples and data exploration
- PLS regression
- Calibration models for prediction of port wine
age - ET and chemical analysis data
- Raw and OSC filtered data
- Test set validation, 1/3 of the samples were used
as tests - OSC
- Applied for filtering of ET and chemical analysis
data - Software used
- Unscrambler v. 7.8 by CAMO AS
- SIMCA-P v.11.0 by Umetrics
9Orthogonal Signal Correction
- Wold S, Antti H, Lindgren F, Öhman J,
Chemometrics Intell Lab. Syst. 44 (1998) 175-185 - Aim removal of variation in X that is not
correlated with Y prior to modeling - to Xwo, which is orthogonal to Y AND provides
good modeling and prediction of X - po' toX
- XOSC X Stopo
10PCAChemical analysis data
- Good correlation between chemical analysis data
and port wine age - Clustering according to port wine type good
separation between blended tawnies and LBV and
vintage wines
11PCAET data
- No good separation of port wines according to
their age - Clustering according to port wine type
- Significant temporary drift in the data
12Prediction of the port wine agePLS regression on
the raw data
ET
Chemical analysis
PCs in the model - 2 RMSEC 5.3 RMSEP 5.4
13OSC filtering of the data
14OSC filtering of the dataRMSEP
ET data
Chemical analysis data
15Effect of OSC filtering of ET data
16Effect of OSC filtering on ET data
17Conclusions
- Port wine age can be predicted using both
electronic tongue and conventional chemical
analysis data with the same precision of about 5
years. - Electronic tongue response has shown a temporary
drift in port wines, especially pronounced during
first days of measuring session - Data pretreatment using OSC was favorable for ET
data successfully removing time dependence and
producing improved calibration models - Port wine sample can be separated according to
their types using both ET and conventional
chemical analysis data.