E. Damsgaard et K. Heydorn, MATRIX PROBLEMS IN THE CERTIFICATION ANALYSIS OF BOTANICAL MATERIALS BY NEUTRON-ACTIVATION ANALYSIS, Science of the total environment, 176(1-3), 1995, pp. 93-96
Plant materials often contain a mineral fraction as an inseparable par
t of the plant matrix. Methods for trace analysis in biological materi
als may not include the amount of determinand present in such mineral
fractions, but for certification purposes it must be included. Instrum
ental methods of analysis, such as INAA,automatically include the tota
l amount of an element, regardless of its chemical or physical form; o
ther methods, including RNAA, determine only the amount of element in
solution. For certification analysis either the entire sample has been
completely dissolved, or the insoluble residue should not contain the
determinand. In BCR certification analysis for As and Se by RNAA the
irradiated sample was decomposed with sulphuric and nitric acids, and
CRM 279 Sea Lettuce and CRM 402 White Clover left an insoluble residue
. Unirradiated material was then digested without carrier addition, an
d the insoluble residue separated by filtration. No significant conten
t of Se was found by INAA, but about 5% of the total amount of As was
found in CRM 402. The ramifications of making a correction are discuss
ed, and it is concluded that a correction for an insoluble fraction ma
y lead to a positive bias.