Aas
Aas
Aas
Introduction
Invention
Working Principle of AAS
Instrumentation
Interferences
Introduction
The atomic absorption spectrophotometer is used to
measure concentration by detecting absorption of
electromagnetic radiation by atom rather than by
molecules.
Graphite-furnace atomic-absorption
spectrophotometer
Light Source
Hollow Cathode Lamps
Electrodeless Discharge Lamp
Hollow Cathode Lamp
Cobalt Copper
Flame AAS
Advantages
Short analysis time possible
Good precision
Easy to use
Cheap
Limitation
• Sensitivity
• Dynamic range
• Requires flammable gases
• Unattended operation is not possible because of flammable
gases
• Must not contain excessive amounts of dissolved solids
Non flame atomizer (Electro Thermal
Atomizer )
The graphite furnace is an electro thermal atomizer
system that can produce temperatures as high as
3,000°C.
The heated graphite furnace provides the thermal
energy to break chemical bonds within the sample
held in a graphite tube, and produce free ground state
atoms.
The ground-state atoms are capable of absorbing
energy, in the form of light, and are elevated to an
excited state.
The amount of light energy absorbed increases as the
concentration of the selected element increases
Graphite furnace technique
Advantages
Small sample sizes ( as low as 0.5 uL)
Very little or no sample preparation is needed
High sensitivity due to
entire sample is atomized at one time
free atoms remain in the optical path longer
Reduced sample volume
Ultra trace analysis possible
Graphite Furnace AAS Atomizer
Limitation
• Very slow
• Fewer elements can be analyzed
• Poorer precision
• More chemical interferences
• Method development requires skill
• Standard additions calibration required more
frequently (compared to flame AA)
• Expensive consumables (graphite tubes)
Monochromators
Important part in an AA spectrophotometer.
It is used to separate out all of the thousands of
lines. Without a good monochromator, detection
limits are severely compromised.
A monochromator is used to select the specific
wavelength of light which is absorbed by the
sample, and to exclude other wavelengths. The
selection of the specific light allows the
determination of the selected element in the
presence of others.
They are of two types:
1) Prism
2) Diffraction Grating
Prism monochromator :- Quartz
material is used for making prism,
as quartz is transparent over entire
region
Grating monochromator :- it
consists of a series of parallel
straight lines cut into a plane
surface
Detector
The light selected by the monochromator is directed
onto a detector that is typically a photomultiplier tube
, whose function is to convert the light signal into an
electrical signal proportional to the light intensity.
Specific interferences
Also called chemical interferences
because they are more analyte dependent.
Non Spectral Interference
Solute volatilization interference
refers to the situation in which the contaminant forms
nonvolatile species with the analyte.
Example :
phosphate interference in the determination of calcium that is
caused by the formation of calcium–phosphate complexes.
The phosphate interference is overcome by adding a cation,
usually lanthanum or strontium; the cation competes with
calcium for the phosphate.
Dissociation interferences
affect the degree of dissociation of the analyte.
Analytes that form oxides or hydroxides are especially
susceptible to dissociation interferences.
Non Spectral Interference
Ionization interference
occurs when the presence of an easily ionized element,
such as K, affects the degree of ionization of the analyte, which leads to
changes in the analyte signal.
Controlled by adding a relatively high concentration of an
element that is easily ionized to maintain a more consistent
concentration of ions in the flame and to suppress ionization
of the analyte.
Excitation interference,
Analyte atoms are excited in the atomizer, with subsequent
emission at the absorption wavelength.
This type of interference is more pronounced at higher
temperatures.
Background correction
In Zeeman background correction, the light source or the atomizer
is placed in a strong magnetic field.
In practice, because Zeeman correction requires special lamps, the
analyte is placed in the magnetic field..
Th intense magnetic field splits the degenerate (i.e., of equal
energy) atomic energy levels into two components that are
polarized parallel and perpendicular to the magnetic field,
respectively
Background correction
Atomic Emission Spectrophotometry
Flame photometry
Also called Flame Atomic Emission Spectrometry
A photoelectric flame photometer:
an instrument used in determination of electrolytes
such as metal ions: sodium, potassium, calcium, lithium
Flame photometry is based on measurement of
intensity of the light emitted when a metal is
introduced into flame:
The wavelength of color tells what the element is
(qualitative)
The color intensity tells us how much of the element
present (quantitative)
Principle
Basic principle: matter absorbs light at the same wavelength at which
it emits light