Abstract
The portable X-ray fluorescence (pXRF) spectrometry has been very useful for the characterization of different earth materials, and its application for foliar analysis is really promising. The performance of pXRF for foliar analysis depends on several factors such as concentration of the elements, fluorescence yield which is influenced by atomic number, spectral interference, and water content. Mn is one of the elements that present a prominent fluorescence peak. In this sense, it was hypothesized that pXRF can directly determine the Mn concentration on foliar samples, even when used on intact leaves (fresh or dry) being a useful tool for agronomic and environmental purposes. Thus, the objective was to assess the performance of a pXRF to determine Mn concentration in two different foliar datasets from Brazil/South America and Mali/Africa. In the Brazilian dataset, leaves from eight crops (common bean, castor plant, coffee, eucalyptus, guava tree, maize, mango, and soybean) were scanned via pXRF at the following conditions: intact and fresh leaves, intact and dry leaves, and powdered samples). In the Malian dataset, powdered samples from cotton and maize were analyzed via pXRF. For comparison, Mn concentration was also determined after nitro-perchloric digestion followed by quantification via inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectroscopy (ICP-OES). After descriptive statistics, linear regressions were performed for all sample preparation conditions in both datasets, using Mn concentrations obtained through pXRF and the acid digestion method. The data quality level of all linear regressions was considered quantitative with high R (0.93 to 0.98) and R2 (0.87 to 0.96) values. The direct analysis of Mn via pXRF on intact and fresh leaves yielded R of 0.93, R2 of 0.87, and a low relative standard deviation (< 10%). The manufactured pXRF calibration used in this work allowed an accurate direct Mn determination in plant leaves. Considering the importance of Mn as a plant micronutrient and its potential toxicity depending on soil redox conditions, the fast, in situ, non-destructive, and eco-friendly determination via pXRF has a tremendous agronomic and environmental application worldwide.
Published Version
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