Compendium of International Methods of Wine and Must Analysis

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Arsenic (AAS) (Type-IV)

OIV-MA-AS323-01A Determination of arsenic in wine by atomic absorption spectrometer

Type IV method

  1. Principle

After evaporating ethyl alcohol and reducing the arsenic V in arsenic III, wine arsenic is measured by hydride generation and by atomic absorption spectrometry.

  1. Equipment

2.1.   Glass ware:

2.1.1. Graduated flask 50, 100 ml (class A)

2.1.2. Graduated pipettes 1, 5, 10, 25 ml (class A)

2.2.   Water bath at 100°C

2.3.   Filters without ashes

2.4.   Spectrophotometer :

2.4.1. Atomic absorption spectrophotometer

2.4.2. Instrumental parameters

2.4.2.1.  Air-acetylene oxidising flame

2.4.2.2.  Hollow cathode lamp (arsenic)

2.4.2.3.  Wave length: 193.7 nm

2.4.2.4.  Split width: 1.0 nm

2.4.2.5.  Intensity of hollow cathode lamp: 7 mA

2.4.2.6.  Correction of non-specified absorption with a deuterium lamp

2.5.   Accessories:

2.5.1. Hydride absorption cell, placed on an air-acetylene burner.

2.5.2. Vapour generator (liquid gas separator)

2.5.3. Neutral gas (argon)

Figure 1. Hydride generator.

  1. Reagents

3.1.   Ultra-pure demineralised water

3.2.   Ultra-pure 65% nitric acid

3.3.   Potassium iodide (KI)

3.4.   10% .Potassium iodide (m/v)

3.5.   Concentrated hydrochloric acid (R)

3.6.   10% Hydrochloric acid (R)

3.7.   Sodium borohydride (NaBH4)

3.8.   Sodium hydroxide (NaOH)

3.9.   0.6% Sodium borohydride (containing sodium hydroxide: 0.5% (m/v))

3.10.         Calcium Chloride CaCl2 (used as a drying agent)

3.11.         1 g/l Arsenic stock solution prepared in the following manner : dissolve 1.5339 g of A in demineralised water, adjust to 1 l.

3.12.         10 mg/l Arsenic solution: place 1 ml of stock solution (3.11.) in a 100 ml flask (2.1.1.) ;add 1 % nitric acid (3.2.) ; fill up to volume with demineralised water (3.1.).

3.13.         100 μg/l Arsenic solution: place 1 ml of 10 mg/l  arsenic solution (3.12.) in a 100 ml flask (2.1.1.) ; fill up to volume with demineralised water (3.1.).

3.14.         Set of callibration standards: 0, 5, 10, 25 μg/l

Successively place 0, 5, 10, 25 ml of 100 µg/l arsenic solution (3.13.) in 4 100 ml flasks (2.1.1.) ; add 10 ml of 10% potassium iodide to each flask (3.4.) and 10 ml of concentrated hydrochloric acid (3.5.) ; leave for 1 hour, fill up to 100 ml with demineralised water.

  1. Sample preparation

25 ml of water is evaporated over a 100 °C water bath. This is then brought to 50 ml in the presence of 5 ml of 10% potassium iodide and 5 ml of concentrated hydrochloric acid; leave for 1 hour; filter on an ashless filter.

Make a blank reference sample.

  1. Determination

The peristaltic pump sucks in the borohydride solution, the 10% hydrochloric acid solution and the sample solution.

Present the calibration standards in succession (3.14.); take an absorbency reading for 10 seconds; take two readings; the operating software establishes a calibration curve (absorbency according to concentration of arsenic in µg/l).

Then present the samples (4) ; the software establishes the sample’s arsenic concentration in µg/l; deduct the arsenic concentration in the wine in µg/l taking into account that the solution be diluted by 1 / 2 .

  1. Quality control

Quality control is assured by placing a control sample of internal quality (*) in a regular manner in 5 samples, or after the set of calibration solutions, or in the middle of a series or at the end the measurement.

Two deviation types are accepted compared to known value.

(*) Samples from the Bureau Communautaire de Référence (Community Bureau of reference): red wine, dry white wine and sweet white wine.

  1. Bibliography
  • Varian Techtron, 1972. Analytical methods for flame spectroscopy.
  • Hobbins B., 1982. Arsenic Determination by Hydride Generation. Varian Instruments at Work.
  • Le Houillier R., 1986. Use of Drierite Trap to Extend the Lifetime of Vapor Generation Absorption Cell. Varian Instruments at Work.
  • Varian, 1994. Vapor Generation Accessory VGA-77.