Planta Med 2010; 76 - P685
DOI: 10.1055/s-0030-1265861

Infrared spectroscopic and imaging techniques for the non-invasive authentication of medicinal plants and quantification of their constituents

C Huck 1
  • 1Leopold-Franzens University, Institute of Analytical Chemistry and Radiochemistry, Innrain 52a, 6020 Innsbruck, Austria

Near- and mid-infrared spectroscopy (10.000–400cm-1) are non-invasive spectroscopic tools enabling a fast authentication, qualitative and quantitative characterization of medicinal plants, parts therefrom and their constituents. Treatment of spectra recorded with chemometrical and multivariate approaches allows determining chemical (e.g. secondary plant metabolites, leading compounds) and physical parameters (e.g. water, alcohol content) simultaneously by one single measurement lasting only a few seconds. Liquid plant extracts are investigated in the transflection mode at thermostated conditions using light-fibre optics, dried parts of plant (flowers, leaves, roots) also in the reflection mode using a sample desk. For the quantitative analysis of secondary metabolites in e.g. Flos Primulae veris, St. John's Wort, different Achillea species, a reference method based on liquid chromatography (LC), gas chromatography (GC) or capillary electrophoresis (CE) is applied. Qualitative cluster analysis not only allows identifying different parts of a plant but also enables to distinguish different species, which is essential also in traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). For the investigation of active ingredients distribution within a plant part 2d and 3d imaging spectroscopy with a resolution down to 5µm combined with hierarchical cluster analysis (HCA) offers an immense potential as a novel screening tool. In the present contribution the main advantages of the novel quality control IRS tool in medicinal plant analysis are pointed out and discussed in detail by several applications.