| Literature DB >> 27397593 |
Azimah Ismail1, Mohd Ekhwan Toriman2, Hafizan Juahir3, Azlina Md Kassim4, Sharifuddin Md Zain5, Wan Kamaruzaman Wan Ahmad4, Kok Fah Wong4, Ananthy Retnam4, Munirah Abdul Zali4, Mazlin Mokhtar6, Mohd Ayub Yusri7.
Abstract
Extended use of GC-FID and GC-MS in oil spill fingerprinting and matching is significantly important for oil classification from the oil spill sources collected from various areas of Peninsular Malaysia and Sabah (East Malaysia). Oil spill fingerprinting from GC-FID and GC-MS coupled with chemometric techniques (discriminant analysis and principal component analysis) is used as a diagnostic tool to classify the types of oil polluting the water. Clustering and discrimination of oil spill compounds in the water from the actual site of oil spill events are divided into four groups viz. diesel, Heavy Fuel Oil (HFO), Mixture Oil containing Light Fuel Oil (MOLFO) and Waste Oil (WO) according to the similarity of their intrinsic chemical properties. Principal component analysis (PCA) demonstrates that diesel, HFO, MOLFO and WO are types of oil or oil products from complex oil mixtures with a total variance of 85.34% and are identified with various anthropogenic activities related to either intentional releasing of oil or accidental discharge of oil into the environment. Our results show that the use of chemometric techniques is significant in providing independent validation for classifying the types of spilled oil in the investigation of oil spill pollution in Malaysia. This, in consequence would result in cost and time saving in identification of the oil spill sources.Entities:
Keywords: Chemometric; Discriminant analysis; Fingerprinting; Oil spill; Peninsular Malaysia; Principal component analysis
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27397593 DOI: 10.1016/j.marpolbul.2016.06.089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Pollut Bull ISSN: 0025-326X Impact factor: 5.553