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Provenance determination of South African wines with quadrupole-based ICP-MS measurements of ¹¹B/¹°B isotope ratios

M.Sc. / The origin of a wine plays a key role in establishing the quality and the price the consumer is prepared to pay. Fingerprinting techniques based on multi-element data combined with multivariate statistical analysis as well as isotope ratio data for certain elements such as boron (11B/10B) and strontium (87Sr/86Sr) are being developed and have been used for provenance determination of wine with varying degrees of success. The aim of this study was to develop a method to determine boron isotope ratios (11B/10B) with the required precision using ICP-MS (inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry) in soil and wine samples and applying this method to establish the origin of South African wines. Analytical difficulties such as the boron memory effect, dead time, mass bias drift and matrix effects were investigated. Although the memory effect, dead time and mass bias drift were satisfactorily resolved, it was not possible to determine what the cause of all the observed matrix effects was during this study. The method was used to categorise wines from the Robertson, Swartland and Stellenbosch regions and an attempt was made to link the measured boron isotope ratios with that obtained from the corresponding provenance soils. The 11B/10B isotope ratios for the wine samples (Robertson: 4.202 ± 0.014, Swartland: 4.173 ± 0.013 and Stellenbosch: 4.174 ± 0.028) were, however, higher than the ratios obtained for the soil samples (Robertson: 4.108 ± 0.020, Swartland: 4.070 ± 0.023 and Stellenbosch: 4.124 ± 0.039). It was possible to distinguish, using the boron isotope ratios (wine and soil samples), between the Robertson area (Breede River region) and the Swartland area (Coastal region). The wine and soil 11B/10B isotope ratios obtained for the Stellenbosch area (Coastal region) overlapped with the 11B/10B isotope ratios of the Robertson and Swartland regions making it impossible to differentiate it from these two regions.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:uj/uj:8639
Date16 November 2009
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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