A tight quality control along the production steps is critical for valuable ingredients like cocoa as well as the final chocolate products. FT-NIR provides accurate analysis results of multiple components within seconds for fast decisions to maintain highest quality.
Chocolate contains valuable ingredients like cocoa powder, cocoa butter, lecithin, milk powders and sugars. The art of chocolate making is the careful mixing of these ingredients to achieve an constant product at optimized cost. A tight quality control along the production steps is therefore critical. FT-NIR provides accurate analysis results of multiple components within seconds.
One example is the determination of fat content in chocolate. The standard reference lab method is Soxhlet extraction which takes at least 2 hours - too slow to react on deviations in the production process. Here, NIR spectroscopy is the preferred method. All ingredients can be analyzed in less than a minute with MPA II or TANGO spectrometers. Alternatively, fiber optic probes can be used in conjunction with the on-line spectrometer MATRIX-F II. An ideal position for sampling is e.g. at the Conche, before the chocolate is brought into its final form.
Moreover the chocolate can be analyzed as liquor or as the final product. The sample measurement is carried out in seconds using easy to fill disposable polystyrene or glass Petri dishes.
Many kinds of sweet baked products are made from ingredients such as flour, sugar, milk, oils, butter; ideal for the analysis with FT-NIR. Moreover, the finished products can be tested for nutritional values. Examples are sweet pastry products, cakes, cookies or biscuits with many different recipes.
A challenge can be the sample preparation and presentation which are often not as homogeneous as a plain cookie or biscuit. Pastries for example can be quite heterogeneous with chocolate coatings, fruits and added nuts, confectionery often have cream fillings. Here the sample must be homogenized to derive reliable average values e.g. for checking of labeling claims.
In addition ingredients such as honey, nuts, caramel and marzipan can be analyzed with the same instrument to secure the requested quality and adjust recipes if required.