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Testing Metal Content in Jewelry Components

Safety issues and recent legal requirements have drawn attention to the need for testing jewelry items and their component parts. The accuracy, costs and legal authority of available methods vary widely.

Swab Testing
Simple & Inexpensive

The simplest test for lead is performed with a swab kit found commonly in hardware stores for about $4 each. Wiping the swab across the surface of an item can detect lead levels as low as .06% (600 ppm). Online instructions are available from the Center for Environmental Health in Oakland, California.

Consumer Reports reviewed these products and offers their observations online. However, the reliability of these kits is controversial. In particular, you should keep in mind that plating or other surface coatings on jewelry items can mask the composition of the underlying metal and could prevent accurate test result.

Several  brands of these swabs are available:

Lead Check

Lead Inspector

The Lead Detective

XRF Analysis
More Accurate, More Expensive

A more accurate test can be performed using X-Ray Fluorescence Spectrometry (XRF). In this approach, the X-Ray can penetrate surface coatings to read the core material and report on the percentage of each metal in the alloy. Each test costs around $100. Yet, despite its increase in accuracy and cost, this testing methodology does not satisfy recent California testing requirements.

You may find a local testing facility in your area in the Yellow Pages under Laboratories-Testing or Laboratories-Analytical. You may also want to check the online listings provided the State of California. Look for the link entitled “Certified Laboratory List Rev. 01/28/2008 “ – midway down the page under Information, Lists and Forms.

Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry
Complies with Regulations, Destroys Test Sample, Most Expensive

Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry (ICPMS) should be chosen when proper certification is demanded. It is a sophisticated approach that yields accurate analysis (to 1ppm), but destroys the sample in the process. There are two methods (3050B & 3051A) of sample preparation prior to analysis by ICPMS that are acceptable under the new State of California regulations limiting lead in jewelry.  ICPMS costs from $150-$200 per test sample. This testing approach is also available through facilities listed under Laboratories-Testing or Laboratories-Analytical of your local Yellow Pages.

Bodycote Testing Group, with facilities worldwide, can provide this service.



*TierraCast offers this information as a public service and believes that it is substantially true and correct. It is provided to aid the consumer, but it is not expert legal advice and should not be relied upon as such by individuals or businesses in their efforts to comply with current legislation in any country, nor to satisfy themselves of the safety of any given item.

 

 

 

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