Identification
and Characterization of Mercury Contamination
in Vegetables and Herbs Cultivated on a Commercial Vertical Indoor
Farming System with Light-Emitting Diode Lighting: Unveiling an Unusual
Food Safety Risk of Some Improperly Manufactured High-Density Agricultural
Production Systems
posted on 2023-09-08, 12:47authored byWan Ling Ng, Ivan Si Ming Ng, Lian Jie Bay, Haiyan Li, Peggy Chui Fong Chew, Shoo Peng Koh, Kah Meng Lee, Yuansheng Wu, Sheot Harn Chan
Artificial grow lights, such as light-emitting diodes
(LEDs) and
fluorescent grow lights, are commonly used in modern day indoor farming,
citing advantages in energy efficiency and a higher controlled environment.
However, the use of LEDs poses a risk in mercury contaminations as
a result of its production process, specifically LEDs with polyurethane
encapsulates that were traditionally produced using mercury resins
as a catalyst. A total of 10.0 ppm of mercury was detected in a curly
kale sample harvested from an indoor hydroponic vegetable farm, exceeding
Singapore Food Regulation’s limit of 0.05 ppm. Vegetables,
farming inputs, and surface swabs from the affected farm were analyzed
using wet acid digestion followed by cold vapor atomic absorption
spectroscopy analysis. The investigation found high concentrations
of mercury in the LED encapsulant, and the encapsulant material was
identified to be polyurethane by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy
and pyrolysis–gas chromatography–mass spectrometry analysis,
indicating the source of mercury contamination to be the LED polyurethane
encapsulant.