Abstract

Tea is one of the most widely consumed beverages in the world preceded only by water. In some culture style of tea plant, urea fertilizer is sprayed on tea leaf in order to increase crop output; besides, in some processing method of green tea, urea is illegally added to maintain tea’s vivid color. The above-mentioned process may unavoidably cause urea residue, and prolonged or repeated exposure of body to urea may cause adverse effects. In this work, an easy and reliable hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry analytical method for determination of urea in tea was firstly validated; the method exhibited a linear response from 4 to 60 μg mL−1 (R 2 > 0.9996), the limit of quantitation for urea is 4 μg mL−1, the mean recoveries of urea spiked at levels of 10 and 20 μg mL−1 were 95–110 %, and the relative standard deviations of intra- and inter-day measurements were less than 7.8 %. The method was later successfully applied to the analysis of urea residue in some market tea samples. The result showed that there is obvious urea contamination in some market teas, and the contamination percentage is especially high in green tea samples. Among the samples investigated, urea was detected at concentration ranges of 24.02–46.02 mg/kg. Some attention should be paid on the health effect resulting from such urea contamination in tea.

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