Artículos de revistas
Compton suppression instrumental neutron activation analysis performance in determining trace- and minor-element contents in foodstuff
Fecha
2008Registro en:
JOURNAL OF RADIOANALYTICAL AND NUCLEAR CHEMISTRY, v.276, n.1, p.149-156, 2008
0236-5731
10.1007/s10967-007-0424-6
Autor
FREITAS, M. C.
PACHECO, A. M. G.
BACCHI, M. A.
DIONISIO, I.
LANDSBERGER, S.
BRAISTED, J.
FERNANDES, E. A. N.
Institución
Resumen
In 2003-2004, several food items were purchased from large commercial outlets in Coimbra, Portugal. Such items included meats (chicken, pork, beef), eggs, rice, beans and vegetables (tomato, carrot, potato, cabbage, broccoli, lettuce). Elemental analysis was carried out through INAA at the Technological and Nuclear Institute (ITN, Portugal), the Nuclear Energy Centre for Agriculture (CENA, Brazil), and the Nuclear Engineering Teaching Lab of the University of Texas at Austin (NETL, USA). At the latter two, INAA was also associated to Compton suppression. It can be concluded that by applying Compton suppression (1) the detection limits for arsenic, copper and potassium improved; (2) the counting-statistics error for molybdenum diminished; and (3) the long-lived zinc had its 1115-keV photopeak better defined. In general, the improvement sought by introducing Compton suppression in foodstuff analysis was not significant. Lettuce, cabbage and chicken (liver, stomach, heart) are the richest diets in terms of human nutrients.