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Trace elements analysis

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Title: Trace elements analysis


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Trace elements analysis
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Elemental Analysis
  • This chapter includes no detailed
    description of methods to determine individual
    mineral components. Such procedures are described
    in general textbooks of inorganic analysis,
    standard reference books on food analysis, and
    specialized textbooks on the determination of
    minerals in biological materials. The principles
    of instrumental methods used in the determination
    of mineral components and trace elements also
    were descried in previous chapters of this book.
    This chapter is primarily concerned with the
    applications of those principles to food
    analysis.
  • Developments in the measurement of trace
    metal components in foods were described by
    LaFluer (1976), Winefordner (1976), Bratter and
    Schramel (1980), Das (1983), Schwedt (1984), and
    Benton-Jones (1984). Tshopel and Tolg (1982)
    reviewed the basic rules that have to be followed
    in trace analyses to obtain precise and accurate
    results at the nanogram and pictogram levels.
    These rules are as follows
  • 1. All materials used for apparatus and
    tools must be as pure and inert as possible.
    These requirements are only approximately met by
    quartz, platinum, glassy carbon, and, to a lesser
    degree,

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  • polypropylene.
  • 2. Cleaning of the apparatus and
    vessels by steaming is very important to lower
    blanks as well as element losses by adsorption.
  • 3. To minimize systematic errors,
    microchemical techniques with small apparatus and
    vessels with an optimal ratio of surface to
    volume are recommended. All steps of the
    analytical procedure, such as composition,
    separation, preconcentration, and determination,
    are best done in one vessel (single-vessel
    principle). If volatile elements or compounds
    have to be determined, the system should be
    closed off and the temperature should be as low
    as possible.
  • 4. Reagents, carrier gases, and
    auxiliary materials should be as pure as
    possible. Reagents that can be purified by
    subboiling point distillation are preferred.
  • 5. Contamination from laboratory air
    should be avoided by using clean benched and
    clean rooms. By this, the blanks caused by dust
    can be decreased by at least two or three orders
    of magnitude.

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  • 6. Low and constant reaction
    temperature should be used.
  • 7. Manipulations and different working
    steps should be restricted to a minimum in order
    to reduce unavoidable contamination.
  • 8. All steps of the combined procedure
    should be monitored this can best be done with
    radiotracers.
  • 9. All procedures have to be verified
    by a second independent one or, even much better,
    by an interlaboratory comparative analysis.
  • Element Enrichment
  • The determination of trace element often
    requires enrichment of the elements, and/or the
    separation of many elements at the trace level
    from large amounts of major elements. Ion
    exchange has proved to be a valuable tool in the
    concentration, isolation, and recovery of ionic
    materials present in a solution in trace amounts.
    Ion-exchange chromatography on an ion-exchange
    resin can be also used for fractionation,
    separation, and the elimination of interfering
    ions.

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  • Emission Spectroscopy
  • Emission spectroscopy is the oldest
    instrumental method for trace analysis. It
    depends on observing and measuring the radiation
    emitted by atoms of the various means fall back
    to the original (or a lower) level. For each
    element there is a pattern of wavelengths
    characteristic of the element when excited in a
    particular way. By identifying the wavelengths in
    the spectrum, the sample can be analyzed.
    Emission spectroscopy is sensitive but the
    precision is rather low.
  • Flame Photometry
  • Early studies during the nineteenth
    century by J. F. Herschel, D. Alter, and G.
    kirchhoff and R. Bunsen laid the foundations for
    the qualitative differentiation of salts
    depending on their emission in a flame. Later
    researchers developed suitable techniques and
    instruments for quantitative analyses based on
    flame photometry. A modern flame photometer
    consists essentially of an atomizer, a burner,
    some means of isolating the desired part of the
    spectrum, a photosensitive detector, sometimes an
    amplifier, and finally a

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  • method of measuring the desired emission by
    a galvanometer, null meter, or chart recorder
    (see Chapter 10 for details). The instruments are
    used primarily to determine calcium, sodium, and
    potassium.
  • Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy
  • Within the last two decades atomic
    absorption spectroscopy has found enthusiastic
    acceptance by science and industry. Hundreds of
    papers are published annually on basic research,
    instrumentation, specific analytical methods, and
    practical applications of atomic absorption
    spectroscopy.
  • Atomic absorption spectroscopy is not
    quite as free from inter-element effects as was
    originally expected, but it is far better in this
    respect than any from of emission spectrography.
    It is quite sensitive the limit of detection
    ranges from 0.01 ppm for magnesium to 5.00 ppm
    for barium and the method is rapid (about 1000
    determinations can be made per week). The
    equipment is relatively inexpensive (about
    20000), only one-tenth the coast of X-ray
    fluorescence equipment. The limiting factor is
    the need for cathode lamps for each element or
    several combinations.

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  • In atomic fluorescence spectroscopy,
    atoms are generated in the same way as in atomic
    absorption spectroscopy, expect that a
    cylindrical flame is used. The flame is
    irradiated by resonance radiation from a powerful
    spectral source, and the fluorescence that is
    generated in the flame is measured at right
    angles to the incident beam of radiation. This is
    done to minimize the contamination of the
    fluorescence signal by light from the source.
  • Atomic absorption spectroscopy can be
    used in the ppm range atomic fluorescence
    spectroscopy in the ppb range.
  • Neutron Activation Analysis
  • In neutron activation analysis, a weighed
    sample together with a standard that contains a
    known weight of the element sought is exposed to
    unclear bombardment. The radioactivity of the
    element in the sample is then compared with the
    radioactivity in the standard. Generally, a
    chemical separation is required to purify the
    radioisotopes of the element sought and to remove
    all other induced radioactivity. The quantity of
    the element in the sample is then calculated from
    the ratio of the separated activities. In some

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  • instance, the final measurement of activity
    can be made on the intact sample. If the
    background remains inactive during nuclear
    bombardment or if the energies of the emitted
    radiations differ widely, a direct measurement of
    trace elements is possible. Also, if the trace
    element has a substantially longer half-life than
    the other induce activities, the interfering
    materials may be allowed to decay and the
    radioassay completed when the interference is
    insignificant. Results obtained by neutron
    activation generally are within 5 of the true
    value, and replicate analyses under favorable
    conditions are within 2-3 of the mean.
  • The attractive features of neutron
    activation analyses are its wide applicability,
    high sensitivity, and satisfactory accuracy and
    precision. There have been numerous applications
    of activation analysis in botany and agriculture.
  • X-Ray Spectroscopy
  • There are three uses of X-rays in chemical
    analysis. Absorption methods are of limited
    practical because the adjustment of wavelength is
    most critical. X-ray diffraction is useful in
    crystallography and in establishing the
    complicated structure

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  • of biological molecules. The use of X-ray
    for the identification of chemical components is
    based on emission methods, involving secondary or
    fluorescent emission.
  • Measurement of the intensity and wavelength
    of fluorescence radiation is a well-established
    method of analysis. Coefficients of variation of
    about 1 in the concentration range 5-100 and of
    5 in the range 0.1-1.0 can be obtained. In some
    instances determinations in the chemical
    combination of the element, and nondestructive in
    the sense that specimen examined is not
    destroyed, though some specimen preparation may
    be required. Instrumentation for X-ray
    spectroscopy is quite expensive.
  • Glass Electrodes
  • When a thin membrane of glass is interposed
    between two solutions, an electrical potential
    difference is observed across the glass. The
    potential depends on the ions present in the
    solutions. Depending on the composition of the
    glass, the response may be primarily to the
    hydrogen ion, to other cations, or even to
    organic cations. The electrodes are unaffected by
    oxidants and reducing agents, and only slightly
    affected by anions (except fluoride) or by

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  • high concentrations of proteins and amino
    acids.
  • Miscellaneous Methods
  • Trace elements are determined in many
    laboratories by specific colorimetric and
    turbidimetric methods, by fluorescence analysis,
    and by polarography. The use of infrared
    spectroscopy in determining polyatomic ions was
    described by Miller and Wilkins. Relatively
    simple chromatographic methods for rapid routine
    evaluation of trace elements in crops and foods
    were described by Duffield and Coulson.
  • Impressive advances have been made in
    developing instruments that permit an essentially
    complete elemental analysis to be performed in
    situ on the structures observed in the tissues of
    thin sections prepared by standard histological
    methods. The electron probe microanalyzer or
    electron probe X-ray scanning microscope can
    perform nondestructive elemental chemical
    analyses on localized regions with diameters as
    small as 1µm and volumes of a few cubic
    micrometers. The limit of delectability is about
    0.1, and many inorganic elements can be
    measured.

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  • Another promising technique that has been
    adapted to microanalysis of inorganic elements is
    the laser microprobe. In this instrument, a laser
    beam is flashed through the optics of a regular
    microscope set to analyze a very small arc. The
    instrument is attached to a sensitive
    spectrograph.
  • Finally, mention should be made of
    biological methods of trace analysis.
  • Comparison of Methods
  • Bowen described the results of elemental
    analyses of a standard plant material analyzed
    for 40 elements by 29 laboratories. The
    techniques used were neutron activation analysis,
    atomic absorption spectroscopy, a catalytic
    technique, colorimetry, flame photometry,
    turbidimetry, and titrimetric analysis.
    Consistent results were obtained by more than one
    laboratory for Au, B, Br, Ca, Cl, Co, Cr, Fe,
    Ga, I, Mn, Mo, N, P, Rb, S, Sc, and W. Small
    differences in results were obtained by different
    techniques were found for Cu, K, Mg, Na, P, Se,
    Sr, and Zn. For example, flame photometry gave
    high results for sodium, activation analysis
    without chemical separation was unreliable for
    determining potassium and magnesium, and atomic
    absorption spectrometry gave high

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  • result for copper and strontium. Gross
    discrepancies were found in the result reported
    for aluminum, arsenic, mercury, nickel, and
    titanium. The significance of databases and food
    composition compilations in trace element
    analyses was stressed by Southgate.
  • According to Wolf and Hamly, inorganic
    trace elements of interest in human health can be
    divided into those that are of nutritional and
    toxic interest, those that are primarily of
    nutritional interest, those that are primarily of
    toxic interest. The two techniques considered by
    the authors as having the required sensitivity
    and greatest potential for accurate trace element
    analysis are atomic spectroscopy and neutron
    activation analysis.
  • Hocquellet determined cadmium, lead,
    arsenic, and tin in vegetable and fish oils by
    atomic absorption with electrothermal atomization
    by an oven equipped with a graphite tube.
    Addition of dithiocarbamate for cadmium or of
    dithiocarbamate for lead and arsenic decreased
    volatility of the elements. Detection limits of
    0.5-3.0ng/g and satisfactory recoveries were
    obtained in the 20-ppb range when samples of oil
    diluted in chloroform or in methylisobutyl ketone
    were injected into the atomizer. This rapid
    (minutes

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  • compared to hours for methods with
    nitrosulfuric digestion) direct determination
    method was recommended for rapid routine testing
    of large numbers of samples.
  • Noller and Bloom described an integrated
    analytical scheme for the determination of major
    (sodium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium) and
    minor (zinc, copper, nickel, iron, chromium,
    cesium, lead, tin, and mercury) elements in
    foods. The methods involved flame atomic
    absorption and flame emission spectrometry for
    all elements expect mercury, for which flameless
    atomic absorption was recommended. In a
    collaborative study involving 13 Australian
    laboratories, cadmium, copper, iron, lead, tin,
    and zinc were determined in spiked and unspiked
    samples of apple puree. Atomic absorption was
    used in the flame mode to determine copper, iron,
    and zinc it was efficient and accurate and
    yielded low interlaboratory coefficients of
    variation and good recoveries. However, tin many
    be lost in ashing as volatile stannic chloride or
    as insoluble metastannic acid. Lead was
    determined by direct flame atomic absorption, by
    solvent extraction followed by flame atomic
    absorption, and by electrothermal atomization.
    The methods yielded comparable results.

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  • The graphite furnace as an alternative to
    the combustion flame in atomic absorption
    spectrometry (AAS) because available commercially
    about 1970. Electrothermal atomization offers
    many advantages in terms of sensitivity and
    smaller sample requirements. At the same time,
    the comparatively long analysis times, the need
    to optimize conditions for each element, and the
    occurrence of matrix interferences impaired the
    application of graphite furnace AAS in routine
    analysis. Recent developments in instrument
    design and methodology have reduced the severity
    of those problems, and graphite furnace-AAS is
    the most widely used method for determination of
    trace elements. A combination of wet charring and
    dry ashing suitable for the determination of
    trace metals in oily foods by graphite
    furnace-AAS was described by Seong Lee et al.

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