Analysis of plant raw materials and extracts
applying various vibrational spectroscopy
techniques – possibilities and limitations
Hartwig Schulz,
Gennadi Gudi,
Andrea Krähmer
Kapitel/Beitrag aus dem Buch: Längle, T et al. 2017. OCM 2017 – 3rd International Conference on Optical Characterization of Materials, March 22nd – 23rd, 2017, Karlsruhe, Germany : Conference Proceedings.
New methods using MIR, NIR and Raman spectroscopy in combination with various chemometric algorithms
are presented which allow monitoring numerous plant samples
very efficiently within a short time. Today portable FT-IR spectrometers are available which only need sample amounts of a
few microliters or milligrams. In most cases, the measurements
can be performed directly and non-destructively on the individual plant tissues or plant extracts. Generally, with IR and Raman
spectroscopic techniques spectra are obtained which present
characteristic key bands of individual plant components. These
bands provide important information about the chemical composition of the investigated samples. Based on such markers spectroscopic analyses in principle allow the discrimination of different species, and even to classify chemotypes among the same
species. Combination of vibrational spectroscopy and hierarchical cluster analysis provides a fast, easy and reliable method for
chemotaxonomic characterization. The ability to rapidly monitor various plant components makes it possible to efficiently
select high-quality single plants from wild populations as well
as progenies of crossing experiments. Furthermore, the vibrational spectroscopic methods can also be used by the processing
industry in order to perform fast quality checks of incoming raw
materials as well as continuous controlling of production processes.