The procedure for determining the concentrations of Mg, K, Ca, Mn, Fe, Zn in tea samples was developed by Pereira et al. [29]. When developing a technique for determination of content of Mg, K, Ca, Mn, Fe, and Zn by a X‐ray fluorescent method in different types of tea (black, green tea, tea with a magnolia vine, with chicory, with a lemon, with a camomile, with mint, with apple and cinnamon, with a melissa and a bitter orange, with a wild strawberry, with peumus) authors used a desktop spectrometer of Shimadzu EDX 700 (Japan, the Rh‐anode, 50 W). For analysis, 200 mg of sample material was placed in 5 mm diameter Teflon cells and coated with Mylar film. Measurement conditions: air in spectrometric chamber, potential up to 50 kV, thickness of mylar film of Teflon cell 3 μm, measurement time‐ one hundred seconds. Besides the analyte elements in tea samples the presence of Si, P, S, Cl, and Cu is noted. For fruit tea samples, the metal content was 2 times lower than in fruit‐free tea. The authors obtained good results of Mg, K, Ca determination, standard deviation varied from 7 to 36%. In the case of Mn, Fe, and Zn, questionable results have been obtained which can be used as semi‐quantitative analysis results.
Tanizawa et al. [72] investigated the chemical composition and structure of the precipitate from Lipton Yellow tea formed on the surface of the mugs. The authors applied a complex of methods: XRF, SEM‐EDS, FTIR, XPS, CHN, and O analyzers, infrared spectroscopy, and X‐ray phase analysis. Distilled or tap water from Tokyo was used for brewing. The dark precipitate proved stable and insoluble in water and organic solvents (chloroform, acetone, tetrahydrofuran, dimethyl sulfoxide, methyl alcohol, and ethyl alcohol). The light precipitate was easily removed by distilled water. Analysis by XRF (3270E system, Rigaku) of the five‐day precipitate showed that the concentration of Ca in the precipitate after brewing in tap water was higher (65%) than in distilled water (50%), and the K (7%) and Si (10%) were lower in tap water, compared to distilled water – 23% and 15%, respectively. It is noted that K has greater solubility in tea solution compared to other elements.
The change in the elemental composition of Turkish tea (P, K, Ca, Mg, S, Cl, Mn, Zn, Al, Fe, Si, Rb, Cu, Ni, and Sr) depending on the collection time (May, July, September) has been investigated by Erkisli et al. [73]. A Rigaku ZSX‐100e crystal diffraction spectrometer (Rh anode) was used for semi‐quantitative element evaluation. Fresh green tea leaves were dried at 50 °C for one to two hours, then pressed into tablets using a hydraulic press. The obtained data showed maximum P, Cl, K, Mn, Ni, Cu levels for young tea leaves, and Mg, Al, Si, S, Ca, Fe, Zn, Rb, and Sr levels increase in tea collected on September.
Wastowski et al. [74] determined the inorganic components of commercial teas (dry leaves) and their infusions in hot water by energy‐dispersive X‐ray spectrometry. In this study, 14 different varieties of tea were selected from the most found and consumed in Brazil. A Shimadzu EDX‐720 X‐ray spectrometer was used. The main characteristics of this spectrometer were as follows: the x‐ray tube voltage was 15 keV (from Na to Sc) and 50 keV (from Ti to U), all measurements were performed under vacuum, with an integration time of 300 seconds. This spectrometer was able to identify only seven elements in dry tea: K, S, Ca, Cu, P, Fe, and Mn. Only S, Ca and K were recorded in infusions. The method of fundamental parameters was used to calculate concentrations from measured intensities of analytical lines [36, 42,75–77]. Although the K concentration was highest in commercial dry tea samples, it was found at low concentrations in infusions. For infusions, sulfur was the element that showed the greatest migration from tea leaf samples to their infusions. In addition, heavy metals were not found in any of them in concentrations that could be considered harmful to human health.
Li and Yu [78] evaluated optimal conditions for excitation and detection of Se Kα‐line in biological samples. For calibration five samples prepared in the laboratory and thirty CRM biological materials IGGE (China) were used: liver, huangqi, ginseng, spinach, milk powder, wheat flour, rice and corn flour, soybean powder, cabbage, tea, chicken, and apple. Specimens were prepared by pressing at high pressure. This ensured long‐term use of tablets without deteriorating the reproducibility of measurements. The experiment on the selection of optimal conditions of excitation and detection of Se Kα‐line radiation is performed on the energy‐dispersive X‐ray spectrometer Epsilon 5 (PANalytical, Holland) (combined ScW‐anode, Ge‐detector cooled with liquid nitrogen). A maximum X‐ray tube voltage of 100 kV, a current of up to 6 mA, and a variant with a Zr secondary target without a filter between the X‐ray tube window and the emitter proved to be preferable for excitation and detection of the Se Kα‐line emission for small Se contents. The limit of detection (LOD) of Se in biological samples was reduced to 0.1 μg/g (measurement time of one thousand seconds), as a result of the selection of the optimal conditions for measuring of Se.
Rajapaksha et al. [79] studied the elemental composition of Ceylon tea when it was classified by collection area, applying the energy‐dispersion table spectrometer SPECTRO2000 (Germany), complete with an X‐ray tube with a Pd anode and secondary targets from Co, Mo and Highly Oriented Pyrolytic Graphite. Fresh tea leaves, weighing 10 g, were frozen for 6 hours at −80 °C and lyophilized for 24 h. Then, they were ground to a fine powder, weighing 0.5 g and compressed into tablets. Standard plant materials (including spinach, olive, cabbage, and tea leaves, as well as hay) were used in the construction of the calibration function to extend the concentration range in the determination of Cl, Mn, Cu, and Rb. In calculating the calibration characteristics, the linear regression equation was applied. To account for fluorescence absorption by sample atoms, normalization of the intensity of characteristic radiation of determined elements by intensity of coherent and non‐coherent scattered radiation was used. Intensities for Kα‐line Mg, P, S, Cl were normalized for total coherently and non‐coherently scattered primary radiation intensity PdLα‐line, similarly for K, Ca, Mn ‐ total scattered radiation intensity CoKα secondary target, and for Fe, Cu, Zn, Br, Rb, Sr‐non‐coherent scattered radiation intensity, and intensity Mo Kα from secondary target.
Based on the studies carried out, the authors drew the following conclusions:
XRF proved an effective method for measuring the concentrations of a suite of 13 elements in tea.
The concentration of elements in tea samples could serve as a basis for determining the origin of samples even for closely spaced areas.
Dalipi et al. [80] used a desktop spectrometer S2 PICOFOX (Bruker AXS, Germany). 40 commercially available samples of tea, herbs, and roots were analyzed. Solid samples were ground in an agate mortar. Microwave decomposition was then applied followed by treatment with a mixture of nitric acid and hydrogen peroxide (six minutes). Ga (1 mg/l in the liquid sample prepared for analysis) was used as an internal standard. The contents of 13 elements K, Ca, Ti, Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni, Cu, Zn, Rb, Sr, Ba, and Pb in the test samples were determined. Chemometry was used for classification purposes. The findings showed that TXRF is a fast and simple method of controlling the quality of tea and grass samples, and it can be used on a regular basis in addition to other traditional spectroscopy techniques.
Table 3.1 shows the results of determining the concentrations of several elements in tea samples obtained by examining tea of different origins with XRF. The ranges of their change are significant narrow than range for rocks. Nevertheless, the question of inter‐elemental effects on the results of the determination of chemical composition seems relevant and important in the study of tea and coffee samples.