Visual Detection of Oxidation in Pecan Oil Using a Filter-Paper-Based Color-Sensitive Aldehyde Detection System
Xingye Song, Yifei Lu, Wenjing Zhou, Yuxing Guo, Li Cui, Haijun Zhu

TL;DR
A low-cost, visual test using filter paper detects pecan oil oxidation by color change, accurately identifying if oil meets safety standards.
Contribution
A novel filter-paper-based colorimetric sensor was developed for rapid, accurate, and visual detection of pecan oil oxidation.
Findings
The sensor achieved 100% sensitivity and specificity for detecting pecan oil oxidation at national PV limits.
The shelf-life prediction model showed strong correlation with measured values (R2 between 0.9183 and 0.9841).
The sensor's color change from red to purple-blue reliably indicates oil expiration based on peroxide value.
Abstract
Traditional analytical methods for assessing oil oxidation frequently depend on expensive and intricate equipment or elaborate procedures, thereby hindering their practical use in everyday situations. Sensory evaluation and GC-MS analysis indicated that during storage, the peroxide value (PV) and aldehyde content of pecan oil increased, consistent with progressive oxidation, while the acid value (AV) remained stable. The shelf-life prediction model further underscores its reliability as an oxidation marker. The coefficient of determination (R2) for the first-order kinetic model at temperatures of 20, 40, 50, and 60 °C ranged from 0.9183 to 0.9841. The correlation coefficients between the measured and predicted shelf-life values were 0.9993 for cold-pressed pecan oil (CPO) and 0.9866 for hot-pressed pecan oil (HPO). A filter-paper-based colorimetric aldehyde sensor was developed for the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEdible Oils Quality and Analysis · Nuts composition and effects · Lubricants and Their Additives
