Reduced Plasma Flow ICP-OES Method for the Analysis of Fruit Juices
Applications | 2019 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
Trace metals in food and beverages must be monitored to ensure consumer safety, regulatory compliance, and accurate labeling. The ability to quantify nutrients, micronutrients, and potential toxic heavy metals is fundamental in quality control laboratories. High-throughput, reliable multi-element analysis tools help laboratories meet ever stricter standards while controlling operational costs.
This study evaluated a reduced plasma flow inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry method using the Agilent 5110 Vertical Dual View system for the determination of sixteen trace elements in various fruit juices. The goal was to demonstrate fast, stable, and accurate analysis under regulatory requirements while reducing argon gas consumption.
All measurements employed the Agilent 5110 VDV ICP-OES equipped with an SPS 4 autosampler, Seaspray glass nebulizer, cyclonic spray chamber, and a demountable injector torch. Plasma and auxiliary gas flows were set to 9.5 L/min and 1 L/min respectively, with RF power at 0.9 kW. The Vista Chip II detector enabled full-wavelength single-exposure measurements over eight orders of dynamic range. The ICP Expert software provided automatic fitted background correction and an on-line yttrium internal standard at 5 mg/L.
Calibration curves for all elements were linear, with correlation coefficients above 0.99998. Method detection limits and quantitation limits met ILNAS-EN 16943 2017 and AOAC 2011.14 criteria. Spike recovery tests in cranberry juice yielded recoveries within ten percent. Long-term stability over 8.5 hours showed recoveries within four percent and precision better than one percent RSD. Quantitative analysis of orange juice with pulp identified all elements, and semiquantitative scanning via IntelliQuant generated a complete elemental profile in fifteen seconds.
The reduced-flow ICP-OES method offers high throughput with significant argon gas savings, approximately thirty liters per sample for one hundred seconds analysis. Automated torch alignment and software-driven corrections minimize operator intervention and training. The approach supports routine food and beverage testing laboratories in regulatory compliance, quality assurance screening, and efficient resource management.
Advancements in solid-state RF technology and vertical plasma orientation will further improve stability and reduce operating costs. Integration of semiquantitative screening tools with machine learning algorithms may enable automated anomaly detection. Expanding this methodology to other complex food matrices and coupling ICP-OES with hyphenated separation techniques will broaden its analytical scope.
The Agilent 5110 VDV ICP-OES at a reduced plasma flow provides accurate, stable, and rapid multi-element analysis of fruit juices while cutting argon gas usage. It meets stringent regulatory requirements and supports high-throughput food safety testing with minimal operator effort.
ICP-OES
IndustriesFood & Agriculture
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies, CEM
Summary
Significance of the Topic
Trace metals in food and beverages must be monitored to ensure consumer safety, regulatory compliance, and accurate labeling. The ability to quantify nutrients, micronutrients, and potential toxic heavy metals is fundamental in quality control laboratories. High-throughput, reliable multi-element analysis tools help laboratories meet ever stricter standards while controlling operational costs.
Objectives and Study Overview
This study evaluated a reduced plasma flow inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry method using the Agilent 5110 Vertical Dual View system for the determination of sixteen trace elements in various fruit juices. The goal was to demonstrate fast, stable, and accurate analysis under regulatory requirements while reducing argon gas consumption.
Methodology and Used Instrumentation
All measurements employed the Agilent 5110 VDV ICP-OES equipped with an SPS 4 autosampler, Seaspray glass nebulizer, cyclonic spray chamber, and a demountable injector torch. Plasma and auxiliary gas flows were set to 9.5 L/min and 1 L/min respectively, with RF power at 0.9 kW. The Vista Chip II detector enabled full-wavelength single-exposure measurements over eight orders of dynamic range. The ICP Expert software provided automatic fitted background correction and an on-line yttrium internal standard at 5 mg/L.
- Sample preparation: dilute-and-shoot (40× in 2 percent nitric acid) for clear juices; microwave acid digestion for pulpy samples.
- Calibration: four matrix-matched standards covering target concentrations; linear response with correlation coefficients above 0.99998.
Main Results and Discussion
Calibration curves for all elements were linear, with correlation coefficients above 0.99998. Method detection limits and quantitation limits met ILNAS-EN 16943 2017 and AOAC 2011.14 criteria. Spike recovery tests in cranberry juice yielded recoveries within ten percent. Long-term stability over 8.5 hours showed recoveries within four percent and precision better than one percent RSD. Quantitative analysis of orange juice with pulp identified all elements, and semiquantitative scanning via IntelliQuant generated a complete elemental profile in fifteen seconds.
Benefits and Practical Applications
The reduced-flow ICP-OES method offers high throughput with significant argon gas savings, approximately thirty liters per sample for one hundred seconds analysis. Automated torch alignment and software-driven corrections minimize operator intervention and training. The approach supports routine food and beverage testing laboratories in regulatory compliance, quality assurance screening, and efficient resource management.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Advancements in solid-state RF technology and vertical plasma orientation will further improve stability and reduce operating costs. Integration of semiquantitative screening tools with machine learning algorithms may enable automated anomaly detection. Expanding this methodology to other complex food matrices and coupling ICP-OES with hyphenated separation techniques will broaden its analytical scope.
Conclusion
The Agilent 5110 VDV ICP-OES at a reduced plasma flow provides accurate, stable, and rapid multi-element analysis of fruit juices while cutting argon gas usage. It meets stringent regulatory requirements and supports high-throughput food safety testing with minimal operator effort.
Reference
- European Standard EN 16943 2017 Foodstuffs – Determination of calcium, copper, iron, magnesium, manganese, phosphorus, potassium, sodium, sulfur and zinc by ICP-OES
- AOAC Official Method 2011.14 Calcium, Copper, Iron, Magnesium, Manganese, Potassium, Phosphorus, Sodium, and Zinc in Fortified Food Products – Microwave Digestion and ICP-OES
- Agilent Technologies CCD and CID solid-state detectors publication 5991-4842EN 2016
- Agilent Technologies Fitted Background Correction publication 5991-4836EN 2014
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