Technological solutions might be of great importance for reducing food waste. In the
scope of this article, gas sensor systems for assessing the edibility of food have been
studied, which can help to avoid food losses by suggesting consumption before spoilage
or by separating infected fruits from fresh ones. Several series of measurements with
various foodstuffs were conducted to develop methods that enable the identification of
possible use cases in which gas sensors could be used to assess food condition as well as
methods to calibrate such sensor systems. This paper presents results for oranges as an
important target for grocery stores. The fruit headspace was measured by gas sensors,
reference data were acquired using human assessment (appearance, odor, edibility) and gas
chromatography–massspectrometry(GC-MS)analysis. Dataevaluationshowscorrelations
between the performance of individual sensors for a technical assessment of fruit condition
with marker substances identified by GC-MS, e.g., limonene for damaged oranges. Models
were derived that are, in general, able to quantify the edibility or to classify defects/mold,
but limitations in the applicability/transferability, e.g., between orange varieties, were
also identified. With the knowledge gained, important steps could be taken towards an
application-oriented setup, and recommendations regarding the sensors used, food trained,
and calibration methods applied are derived
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