Literature DB >> 10658340

Source identification of underground fuel spills by solid-phase microextraction/high-resolution gas chromatography/genetic algorithms.

B K Lavine1, J Ritter, A J Moores, M Wilson, A Faruque, H T Mayfield.   

Abstract

Solid-phase microextraction (SPME), capillary column gas chromatography, and pattern recognition methods were used to develop a potential method for typing jet fuels so a spill sample in the environment can be traced to its source. The test data consisted of gas chromatograms from 180 neat jet fuel samples representing common aviation turbine fuels found in the United States (JP-4, Jet-A, JP-7, JPTS, JP-5, JP-8). SPME sampling of the fuel's headspace afforded well-resolved reproducible profiles, which were standardized using special peak-matching software. The peak-matching procedure yielded 84 standardized retention time windows, though not all peaks were present in all gas chromatograms. A genetic algorithm (GA) was employed to identify features (in the standardized chromatograms of the neat jet fuels) suitable for pattern recognition analysis. The GA selected peaks, whose two largest principal components showed clustering of the chromatograms on the basis of fuel type. The principal component analysis routine in the fitness function of the GA acted as an information filter, significantly reducing the size of the search space, since it restricted the search to feature subsets whose variance is primarily about differences between the various fuel types in the training set. In addition, the GA focused on those classes and/or samples that were difficult to classify as it trained using a form of boosting. Samples that consistently classify correctly were not as heavily weighted as samples that were difficult to classify. Over time, the GA learned its optimal parameters in a manner similar to a perceptron. The pattern recognition GA integrated aspects of strong and weak learning to yield a "smart" one-pass procedure for feature selection.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10658340     DOI: 10.1021/ac9904967

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anal Chem        ISSN: 0003-2700            Impact factor:   6.986


  2 in total

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Authors:  William Rayens; Yushu Liu; Anders Andersen; Charles Smith
Journal:  J Chemother       Date:  2008-09       Impact factor: 1.714

2.  Ion mobility-mass spectrometry analysis of serum N-linked glycans from esophageal adenocarcinoma phenotypes.

Authors:  M M Gaye; S J Valentine; Y Hu; N Mirjankar; Z T Hammoud; Y Mechref; B K Lavine; D E Clemmer
Journal:  J Proteome Res       Date:  2012-11-05       Impact factor: 4.466

  2 in total

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