Endogenous n-Alkanes in vegetable oils: validation of a rapid offline SPE-GC-FID method, comparison with online LC-GC-FID and potential for olive oil quality control
The potential of endogenous n-alkane profiling for the assessment of extra virgin olive oils
(EVOO) adulteration (blends with cheaper vegetable oils) has been studied by relatively few
authors. Analytical methods used for this purpose often involve tedious and solvent-intensive
sample preparation prior to analytical determination, making them unattractive. A rapid and
solvent-sparing offline solid phase extraction (SPE) gas chromatography (GC) flame ionization
detection (FID) method for the determination of endogenous n-alkanes in vegetable oils was,
therefore, optimized and validated. The optimized method demonstrated good performance
characteristics in terms of linearity (R2 > 0.999), recovery (on average 94%), and repeatability
(residual standard deviation, RSD < 11.9%). The results were comparable to those obtained with
online high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)-GC- FID ( RSD < 5.1%). As an example of
an application to prove the potentiality of endogenous n-alkanes in revealing frauds, the data set
obtained from 16 EVOO, 9 avocado oils (AVO), and 13 sunflower oils (SFO), purchased from the
market, was subjected to statistical analysis and principal component analysis. Two powerful
indices, namely (n-C29 + n-C31)/(n-C25 + n-C26) and n-C29/n-C25, were found to reveal the addition of
2% SFO in EVOO and 5% AVO in EVOO, respectively. Further studies are needed to confirm the
validity of these promising indices.