Carotenoids and chlorophyll derivatives play a key role in Extra Virgin Olive Oils (EVOOs). Many factors,
such as cultivar, geographic origin, maturity of olives, climate and storage conditions, influence the
pigments’ content. The quantification of pigments is usually done by chromatographic techniques.
However, recent works evidenced the potentialities of UV-visible-related methodologies. In this
research, a selection of EVOO samples produced from olives harvested at the beginning of November
2014 in Greece, Tunisia, Italy and Spain, was investigated in terms of pigments by means of two methods.
The first one is a recent approach based on the mathematical treatment of near UV-vis absorption spectra
of olive oils to quantify in a fast, cheap and non-destructive way four main pigments, namely b-carotene,
lutein, pheophytin A and pheophytin B. The second one is a more standard HPLC-DAD method. From the
comparison between the two methods, we can conclude that the new near UV-vis approach gives
reliable results, with good precision and high reproducibility. Pigments quantified by these two methods
in EVOOs produced in four countries from different cultivars are analyzed by principal component
analysis (PCA). Results indicate that pigments can be correlated to several factors such as ripeness stage,
geographic origin and cultivars
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