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Food Matrix Reference Materials for Hydrogen, Carbon, Nitrogen, Oxygen, and Sulfur Stable Isotope-Ratio Measurements: Collagens, Flours, Honeys, and Vegetable Oils
Author(s) -
Arndt Schimmelmann,
Haiping Qi,
Philip J. H. Dunn,
Federica Camin,
Luana Bontempo,
Doris Potočnik,
Nives Ogrinc,
Simon Kelly,
James F. Carter,
Aiman Abrahim,
Lauren T. Reid,
Tyler B. Coplen
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of agricultural and food chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.203
H-Index - 297
eISSN - 1520-5118
pISSN - 0021-8561
DOI - 10.1021/acs.jafc.0c02610
Subject(s) - sulfur , stable isotope ratio , nitrogen , isotopes of nitrogen , chemistry , isotope , environmental chemistry , isotopes of carbon , normalization (sociology) , isotope analysis , environmental science , biology , ecology , total organic carbon , physics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics , anthropology , sociology
An international project developed, quality-tested, and measured isotope-delta values of 10 new food matrix reference materials (RMs) for hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur stable isotope-ratio measurements to support food authenticity testing and food provenance verification. These new RMs, USGS82 to USGS91, will enable users to normalize measurements of samples to isotope-delta scales. The RMs include (i) two honeys from Canada and tropical Vietnam, (ii) two flours from C3 (rice) and C4 (millet) plants, (iii) four vegetable oils from C3 (olive, peanut) and C4 (corn) plants, and (iv) two collagen powders from marine fish and terrestrial mammal origins. An errors-in-variables regression model included the uncertainty associated with the measured and assigned values of the RMs, and it was applied centrally to normalize results and obtain consensus values and measurement uncertainties. Utilization of these new RMs should facilitate mutual compatibility of stable isotope data if accepted normalization procedures are applied and documented.

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