Saccharide concentration prediction from proxy sea surface microlayer samples analyzed via infrared spectroscopy and quantitative machine learning

04 January 2024, Version 3
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Solvated organics in the ocean are present in relatively small concentrations but contribute largely to ocean chemical diversity and complexity. Existing in the ocean as dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and enriched within the sea surface microlayer (SSML), these compounds have large impacts on atmospheric chemistry through their contributions to cloud nucleation, ice formation and other climatological processes. The ability to quantify the concentrations of organics in ocean samples is critical for understanding these marine processes. The work presented herein details an investigation to develop machine learning (ML) methodology utilizing infrared spectroscopy data to accurately estimate saccharide concentrations in complex solutions. We evaluated multivariate linear regression (MLR), K-Nearest-Neighbors (KNN), Decision Trees (DT), Gradient Boosted Regressors (GBR), Multilayer Perceptrons (MLP), and Support Vector Regressors (SVR) toward this goal. SVR models are shown to predict the accurate generalized saccharide concentrations best. Our work presents an application combining fast spectroscopic techniques with ML to analyze organic composition proxy ocean samples to target a generalized method for analyzing field marine samples more efficiently, without sacrificing accuracy or precision.

Keywords

ocean
sea surface microlayer
sea surface water
ocean monitoring
analytical spectroscopy

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