Application of Near Infra Red (NIR) Spectroscopy and Chemometrics for Determination Antioxidant Activity of Plant Leaves Extracts
Date
2020-02-01Author
WULANDARI, Lestyo
KRISTININGRUM, Nia
KARTIKASARI, Ekananda Putri
LESTARI, Nadya Dini
DELIMAN, Yolanda
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Show full item recordAbstract
Context: Near Infra red (NIR) spectroscopy combined with chemometrics has been
developed for simple analysis of antioxidant activity in the medicinal plant extract.
Aims: The aim of this research was to study whether NIR and chemometric methods
could be used to determine the antioxidant activity. Settings and Design: A model
for determining antioxidant activity of plant extracts was formed using chemometric
and the model was applied on real samples. Methods and Material: Medicinal
plant leaves were extracted and its spectral data were correlated with its antioxidant
activity using chemometric. The chemometric method used for calibration analysis
were Partial Last Square (PLS), Principal Component Regression (PCR) and
Support Vector Machines Regression (SVMR), and the methods used for
classification analysis were Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA), Soft Independent
Modelling of Class Analogies (SIMCA), and Support Vector Machines
Classification (SVMC).Statistical analysis used: Paired–sample t test was used in
this study. Results: In this study, SVMC that showed best classification with
accuracy was 100 % and SVMR that showed best calibration with R2 and RMSEC
value was 0.9 811 205 and 4.4 940 028, respectively. SVMC and SVMR models
were further used to predict unknown antioxidant activity in commercial and
simulation samples. Using these models, the significance of antioxidant activity that
has been measured by NIR and UV‒Vis spectrophotometry was evaluated with
paired samples ttest and gave no significant difference. Conclusions: This study
showed that NIR spectroscopy coupled with chemometric could be used for
determining antioxidant activity of several plant extracts.
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- LSP-Jurnal Ilmiah Dosen [7300]