Author/Authors :
BAHARUDDIN, NORSHIDAH Standards and Industrial Research Institute of Malaysia (SIRIM) Berhad, Malaysia , SAIM, NOR’ASHIKIN Universiti Teknologi MARA - Faculty of Applied Sciences, Malaysia , ZAIN, SHARIFUDDIN M. university of malaya - Faculty of Science - Department of Chemistry, Malaysia , JUAHIR, HAFIZAN Universiti Sultan Zainal Abidin - East Coast Environmental Research Institute (ESERI), Malaysia , OSMAN, ROZITA Universiti Teknologi MARA - Faculty of Applied Sciences, Malaysia , AZIZ, AZIAH Standards and Industrial Research Institute of Malaysia (SIRIM) Berhad, Malaysia
Abstract :
Water pollution has become a growing threat to human society and natural ecosystem in recent decades, increasing the need to better understand the variabilities of pollutants within aquatic systems. This study presents the application of two chemometric techniques, namely, cluster analysis (CA) and principal component analysis (PCA). This is to classify and identify the water quality variables into groups of similarities or dissimilarities and to determine their significance. Six stations along Kinta River, Perak, were monitored for 30 physical and chemical parameters during the period of 1997–2006. Using CA, the 30 physical and chemical parameters were classified into 4 clusters; PCA was applied to the datasets and resulted in 10 varifactors with a total variance of 78.06%. The varifactors obtained indicated the significance of each of the variables to the pollution of Kinta River.
Keywords :
Chemometrics , cluster analysis , ecosystems , principal component analysis