Studies on Metals in Alcoholic Beverages (II) On the Content of Copper, Iron, Zinc, Lead and Tin in Sake, Wine and Beer

The contents of iron, copper, zinc, lead and tin in sake brewing water, sake, wine and beer were determined by square-wave polarography. The results obtained are summarized as follows: 1. The content of iron: Below 0.10ppm (8 samples) and 0.11-0.40ppm (14 samples) for sake. 3.47-14.16ppm (2 samples)...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inFood Hygiene and Safety Science (Shokuhin Eiseigaku Zasshi) Vol. 7; no. 4; pp. 327 - 330_1
Main Author KONDO, Tatsuo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Japanese Society for Food Hygiene and Safety 1966
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Summary:The contents of iron, copper, zinc, lead and tin in sake brewing water, sake, wine and beer were determined by square-wave polarography. The results obtained are summarized as follows: 1. The content of iron: Below 0.10ppm (8 samples) and 0.11-0.40ppm (14 samples) for sake. 3.47-14.16ppm (2 samples) for canned sake. Below 0.50ppm (1 sample) and 0.88-6.72ppm (4 samples) for wine. 0.12-0.17ppm (4 samples) for canned beer and below 0.10ppm (1 sample) for beer. 2. The content of copper: 0.09-1.20ppm (24 samples) for sake. 0.18-1.46ppm (2 samples) for canned sake. 0.14-7.85ppm (5 samples) for wine. 0.06-0.14ppm (4 samples) for canned beer and 0.06ppm (1 sample) for beer. 3. The content of zinc: 0.71-2.10ppm (14 samples) for sake and 0.12-1.53ppm (5 samples) for wine. 4. The content of lead: Below 0.05ppm (5 samples) and 0.06-0.44ppm (10 samples) for sake. Below 0.10ppm (3 samples) and 0.12-0.32ppm (2 samples) for wine. 5. The content of iron in canned sake (2 samples) was higher than in bottled one while tin was very low in canned sake and beer. 6. It was confirmed that copper-contamination of high degree in samples (No. 1, 2, 3 and 4) was due to exposure on the corrosived surface of the filter apparatus.
ISSN:0015-6426
1882-1006
DOI:10.3358/shokueishi.7.327