Soil organic carbon determination using NIRS: evaluation of dichromate oxidation and dry combustion analysis as reference methods in multivariate calibration.

Dichromate oxidation and dry combustion analysis were evaluated as reference methods to determine organic carbon in Brazilian soils using near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) as an alternative. The main objective of this study was to evaluate which of the reference methods could provide a calibration model with higher predictive ability. A total of 161 soil samples obtained from horizons in full profiles (Parque Estadual da Mata Seca, Minas Gerais State, Brazil) were used. Models were mean centered and built from partial least squares. The dichromate oxidation method presented a lower accuracy when compared to dry combustion analysis as reference for NIRS. Figures of merit such as sensitivity, analytical sensitivity, detection and quantification limits, adjust and linearity presented results very similar. A paired t-test was applied to the figures of merit results and with 95% confidence did not show significant differences between the two methods used as reference for NIRS. The non-parametric Mann Whitney test showed that the samples provided with the partial least squares (PLS) model when the reference method was the dichromate oxidation or dry combustion analysis come from the same population, indicating that the reference methods employed for multivariate calibration from NIRS provide the same results practically.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: BELTRAME, K. K., SOUZA, A. M. de, COELHO, M. R., WINKLER, T. C. B., SOUZA, W. E., VALDERRAMA, P.
Other Authors: KARLA K. BELTRAME, UTFPR; ANDRE MARCELO DE SOUZA, CNPS; MAURICIO RIZZATO COELHO, CNPS; THAYANE C. B. WINKLER; WYRLLEN E. SOUZA, UTFPR; PATRÍCIA VALDERRAMA, UTFPR.
Format: Artigo de periódico biblioteca
Language:English
eng
Published: 2018-08-31
Subjects:Carbono, Análise do Solo, Soil organic carbon, Soil analysis,
Online Access:http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1094899
http://dx.doi.org/10.5935/0103-5053.20160031
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