Abstract
This work describes the determination of aluminum in tea infusions and iced tea by tungsten coil atomic emission spectrometry (WCAES). The instrumentation is simple, inexpensive, and potentially portable. It uses a tungsten filament extracted from 150 W, 15 V commercially available slide projector light bulbs as electrothermal atomizer. A simple power supply that provides a constant potential is used to heat the coil. Tea infusions were directly analyzed by application of an optimized heating program. In order to avoid matrix interferences, the iced tea samples were diluted with an oxidizing mixture composed of hydrogen peroxide and nitric acid and also analyzed by a tailored heating program. Aluminum was quantified in all samples, and the results were in agreement with those obtained by inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry at a 95 % confidence level. The limit of detection and the relative standard deviation for a solution containing 2.5 mg L−1 Al (n = 10) were determined, and the values were 0.09 mg L−1 and 5.1 %, respectively.
Published Version
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