Internal defect scanning of sweetpotatoes using interactance spectroscopy.

While standard visible-light imaging offers a fast and inexpensive means of quality analysis of horticultural products, it is generally limited to measuring superficial (surface) defects. Using light at longer (near-infrared) or shorter (X-ray) wavelengths enables the detection of superficial tissue...

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Main Authors: Michael W Kudenov, Clifton G Scarboro, Ali Altaqui, Mike Boyette, G Craig Yencho, Cranos M Williams
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2021-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0246872
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spelling doaj-aa09340ba97a41d28e6c21c6cb443eaa2021-08-06T04:30:57ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032021-01-01162e024687210.1371/journal.pone.0246872Internal defect scanning of sweetpotatoes using interactance spectroscopy.Michael W KudenovClifton G ScarboroAli AltaquiMike BoyetteG Craig YenchoCranos M WilliamsWhile standard visible-light imaging offers a fast and inexpensive means of quality analysis of horticultural products, it is generally limited to measuring superficial (surface) defects. Using light at longer (near-infrared) or shorter (X-ray) wavelengths enables the detection of superficial tissue bruising and density defects, respectively; however, it does not enable the optical absorption and scattering properties of sub-dermal tissue to be quantified. This paper applies visible and near-infrared interactance spectroscopy to detect internal necrosis in sweetpotatoes and develops a Zemax scattering simulation that models the measured optical signatures for both healthy and necrotic tissue. This study demonstrates that interactance spectroscopy can detect the unique near-infrared optical signatures of necrotic tissues in sweetpotatoes down to a depth of approximately 5±0.5 mm. We anticipate that light scattering measurement methods will represent a significant improvement over the current destructive analysis methods used to assay for internal defects in sweetpotatoes.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0246872
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael W Kudenov
Clifton G Scarboro
Ali Altaqui
Mike Boyette
G Craig Yencho
Cranos M Williams
spellingShingle Michael W Kudenov
Clifton G Scarboro
Ali Altaqui
Mike Boyette
G Craig Yencho
Cranos M Williams
Internal defect scanning of sweetpotatoes using interactance spectroscopy.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Michael W Kudenov
Clifton G Scarboro
Ali Altaqui
Mike Boyette
G Craig Yencho
Cranos M Williams
author_sort Michael W Kudenov
title Internal defect scanning of sweetpotatoes using interactance spectroscopy.
title_short Internal defect scanning of sweetpotatoes using interactance spectroscopy.
title_full Internal defect scanning of sweetpotatoes using interactance spectroscopy.
title_fullStr Internal defect scanning of sweetpotatoes using interactance spectroscopy.
title_full_unstemmed Internal defect scanning of sweetpotatoes using interactance spectroscopy.
title_sort internal defect scanning of sweetpotatoes using interactance spectroscopy.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2021-01-01
description While standard visible-light imaging offers a fast and inexpensive means of quality analysis of horticultural products, it is generally limited to measuring superficial (surface) defects. Using light at longer (near-infrared) or shorter (X-ray) wavelengths enables the detection of superficial tissue bruising and density defects, respectively; however, it does not enable the optical absorption and scattering properties of sub-dermal tissue to be quantified. This paper applies visible and near-infrared interactance spectroscopy to detect internal necrosis in sweetpotatoes and develops a Zemax scattering simulation that models the measured optical signatures for both healthy and necrotic tissue. This study demonstrates that interactance spectroscopy can detect the unique near-infrared optical signatures of necrotic tissues in sweetpotatoes down to a depth of approximately 5±0.5 mm. We anticipate that light scattering measurement methods will represent a significant improvement over the current destructive analysis methods used to assay for internal defects in sweetpotatoes.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0246872
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