Title: Dr.Syed Muzzammil Masaud
1Atomic Absorption Atomic Emission Spectroscopy
- Dr.Syed Muzzammil Masaud
- Mphill.Pharmaceutical Chemistry
2 BASIC PRINCIPLE
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ATOMIC ABSORPTION SPECTROSCOPY (AAS) is an - analytical technique that measures the
concentrations of - elements. It makes use of the absorption
of light - by these elements in order to measure
their -
- concentration .
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3- - Atomic-absorption spectroscopy quantifies the
absorption of ground state atoms in the gaseous
state . - The atoms absorb ultraviolet or visible light and
make transitions to higher electronic energy
levels . The analyte concentration is determined
from the amount of - absorption.
4- Concentration measurements are usually determined
from a working curve after calibrating the
instrument with standards of known concentration.
- - Atomic absorption is a very common
technique for detecting metals and
metalloids in environmental samples.
5Elements detectable by atomic absorption are
highlighted in pink in this periodic table
6The Atomic Absorption Spectrometer
- Atomic absorption spectrometers have 4 principal
components - 1 - A light source ( usually a hollow cathode
lamp ) - 2 An atom cell ( atomizer )
- 3 - A monochromator
- 4 - A detector , and read out device .
7Schematic Diagram of an Atomic Absorption
Spectrometer
Detector and readout device
Light source (hollow cathode Lamp )
atomizer
monochromator
8Atomic Absorption Spectrophotometer
9 1 Light Source
- The light source is usually a hollow cathode
- lamp of the element that is being measured .
It contains a tungsten anode and a hollow
cylindrical cathode made of the element to be
determined. These are sealed in a glass tube
filled with an inert gas (neon or argon ) . Each
element has its own unique lamp which must be
used for - that analysis .
-
10Hollow Cathode Lamp
Quartz window
Pyrex body
Anode
Cathode
11How it works
- Applying a potential difference between the
anode and the cathode leads to the ionization of
some gas atoms . - These gaseous ions bombard the cathode and
eject metal atoms from the cathode in a process
called sputtering. Some sputtered atoms are in
excited states and emit radiation characteristic
of the metal as they fall back to the ground
state .
12Scheme of a hollow cathode lamp
13- The shape of the cathode which is hollow
cylindrical concentrates the emitted radiation
into a beam which passes through a quartz window - all the way to the vaporized sample.
- Since atoms of different elements absorb
- characteristic wavelengths of light.
Analyzing - a sample to see if it contains a particular
element means using light from that element . -
14- For example with lead, a lamp containing lead
emits light from excited lead atoms that produce
the right mix of wavelengths to be absorbed by
any lead atoms from the sample . - A beam of the electromagnetic radiation
emitted from excited lead atoms is passed through
the vaporized sample. Some of the radiation is
absorbed by the lead atoms in the sample. The
greater the number of atoms there is in the vapor
, the more radiation is absorbed .
152 Atomizer
- Elements to be analyzed needs to be in
atomic sate - Atomization is separation of particles into
- individual molecules and breaking molecules
into atoms .This is done by exposing the
analyte to high temperatures in a flame
or graphite furnace . -
16- The role of the atom cell is to primarily
dissolvate a liquid sample and then the solid
particles are vaporized into their free gaseous
ground state form . In this form atoms will be
available to absorb radiation emitted from the
light source and thus generate a measurable
signal proportional to concentration . - There are two types of atomization Flame and
Graphite furnace atomization .
17 18Flame
- Flame AA can only analyze solutions , where
- it uses a slot type burner to increase the
- path length, and therefore to increase the
total - absorbance .
-
- Sample solutions are usually
- introduced into a nebuliser by being sucked up
a - capillary tube .In the nebuliser the sample is
- dispersed into tiny droplets , which can be
- readily broken down in the flame.
19- FLAME ATOMIZERS
- Used in all Atomic Spectroscopic techniques
- Converts analyte into free atoms in the form of
vapor phase free atoms - Heat is required
- Routes for sample introduction
20Various flame atomization techniques
21Types of Flames Used in Atomic Spectroscopy
22Processes that take place in flame
23Effect of flame temperature on excited state
population
atoms in Excited state
Boltzmann constant
Temperature
atoms in Ground state
Energy difference
Statistical factor
24For Zn N/No 10-15
25- Thus 99.998 of Na atoms are in the ground state
- Atomic emission uses Excited atoms
- Atomic absorption uses Ground state atoms
26Effect of flame temperature on excited state
population
27- ATOMIZATION DEVICES
- ATOMIZATION
- A process of forming free atoms by heat
- Atomizers are devices that carry out atomization
- Continuous
- Non-continuous
- Continuous (Constant temperature with time)
- Flame
- Plasma
- Non-Continuous (temperature varies with time)
- Electrothermal
- Spark discharge
28- SAMPLE INTRODUCTION SYSTEMS
- In continuous atomizers sample is constantly
introduced in form of droplets, dry aerosol,
vapor - Nebulizer A device for converting the solution
into fine spray or droplets - Continuous sample introduction is used with
continuous nebulizers in which a steady state
atomic population is produced. Sample is
introduced in fixed or discrete amounts. - Discontinuous samplers are used with continuous
atomizers
291- Discrete samples are introduced into atomizers
in many ways Electrothermal atomizers a
syringe is used a transient signal is produced
as temperature changes with time and
sample is consumed 2- Indirect insertion
(Probe) sample is introduced into a probe
(carbon rod) and
mechanically moved into the atomization region
vapor cloud is transient because sample
introduced is limited
303- Flow Injection The analyte is introduced
into the carrier stream into a nebulizer as
mist 4- Hydride Generation the volatile
sample is stripped from the analyte solution and
carried out by a gas into the atomizer. This
strip is followed by chemically converting the
analyte to hydride vapor form.
315- With Arc Spark Solids are employed 6- Laser
Microbe Technique A beam of laser is directed
onto a small solid sample, gets vaporized,
atomized by relative heating. Either sample is
probed by encoding system or vapor produced is
swept into a second absorption or fluorescence
32- Nebulization gas is always compressed, usually
acts as the oxidant it is oxygen (O2) in flame
and argon (Ar) in plasma - Nebulization chambers produce smaller droplets
and remove or drain larger droplets called
aerosol modifiers - Aspiration rate is proportional to compressed
gas pressure. The pressure drops through
capillary, here 1/4 capillary diameters are
recommended. This is inversely proportional to
viscocity of the solution - Peristaltic and/or syringe pumps could be used
33- Oxidant and fuel are usually brought into the
nebulization chamber through a separate port.
They mix and pass the burner head called premixed
burner system. - Add organic solvents to reduce the size of the
drop
34The Atomic Absorption Spectrometer Sample
Introduction System
Nebuliser
Capillary
Solution
35- The fine mist of droplets is mixed with fuel
( acetylene ) , and oxidant ( nitrous oxide)
and burned. - The flame temperature is important
because it influences the distribution of
atoms. It can be manipulated by
oxidant and fuel ratio.
36Graphite Furnace
- The graphite furnace has several advantages over
a flame. First it accept solutions, slurries, or
solid samples. - Second it is a much more efficient atomizer than
a flame and it can directly accept very small
absolute quantities of sample. It also provides a
reducing environment for easily oxidized
elements. Samples are placed directly in the
graphite furnace and the furnace is electrically
heated in several steps to dry the sample, ash
organic matter, and vaporize the analyte atoms. - It accommodates smaller samples but its a
difficult operation, because the high energy that
is provided to atomize the sample particles into
ground state atoms might excite the atomized
particles into a higher energy level and thus
lowering the precision .
373- Monochromators
- This is a very important part in an AA
spectrometer. 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.
384 - Detector and Read out Device
- 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. - The processing of electrical signal is
fulfilled by a signal amplifier . The signal
could be displayed for readout , or further fed
into a data station for printout by the requested
format.
39Calibration Curve
- A calibration curve is used to determine the
unknown concentration of an element in a
solution. The instrument is calibrated using
several solutions of known concentrations. The
absorbance of each known solution is measured and
then a calibration curve of concentration vs
absorbance is plotted. - The sample solution is fed into the instrument,
and the absorbance of the element in this
solution is measured .The unknown concentration
of the element is then calculated from the
calibration curve
40Calibration Curve
- A 1.0 -
- b 0.9 -
- S 0.8 -
. - o 0.7 - .
- r 0.6 - .
- b 0.5 - . .
- a 0.4 - .
- n 0.3 - .
- c 0.2 -
- e 0.1 -
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- 10 20 30 40 50 60
70 80 90 100
- Concentration
( g/ml )
41Determining concentration fromCalibration Curve
- A 1.0 - absorbance measured
- b 0.9 -
- S 0.8 -
. - o 0.7 - .
- r 0.6 - .
- b 0.5 - . .
- a 0.4 - .
- n 0.3 - .
concentration calculated - c 0.2 -
- e 0.1 -
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-
- 10 20 30 40 50 60
70 80 90 100
- Concentration
( mg/l )
42Interferences
- The concentration of the analyte element is
considered to be proportional to the ground state
atom population in the flame ,any factor that
affects the ground state atom population can be
classified as an interference . - Factors that may affect the ability of the
instrument to read this parameter can also be
classified as an interference .
43- The different interferences that are
encountered in atomic absorption spectroscopy
are - - Absorption of Source Radiation Element other
than the one of interest may absorb the
wavelength being used. -
- - Ionization Interference the formation of ions
rather than atoms causes lower
absorption of radiation .This problem is
overcome by adding ionization suppressors.
- - Self Absorption the atoms of the same kind
that are absorbing radiation will absorb
more at the center of the line than at the
wings ,and thus resulting in the change of
shape of the line as well as its intensity
.
44- - Back ground Absorption of Source Radiation
- This is caused by the presence of a particle
from incomplete atomization .This
problem is overcome by increasing the flame
temperature . -
- - Transport Interference
- Rate of aspiration, nebulization, or transport
of the sample ( e g viscosity,
surface tension, vapor pressure ,
and density ) . -
452Atomic Emission Spectroscopy
- Atomic emission spectroscopy is also an
analytical technique that is used to measure the
concentrations of elements in samples . - It uses quantitative measurement of the emission
from excited atoms to determine analyte
concentration .
46- The analyte atoms are promoted to a higher
energy level by the sufficient energy that is
provided by the high temperature of the
atomization sources . - The excited atoms decay back to lower levels
by emitting light . Emissions are passed through
monochromators or filters prior to detection by
photomultiplier tubes. -
47- The instrumentation of atomic emission
spectroscopy is the same as that of atomic
absorption ,but without the presence of a
radiation source . - In atomic Emission the sample is atomized and
the analyte atoms are excited to higher energy
levels all in the atomizer .
48Schematic Diagram of an Atomic Emission
spectrometer
49Introduction to AES
- Atomization Emission Sources
- Flame still used for metal atoms
- Electric Spark and Arc
- Direct current Plasmas
- Microwave Induced Plasma
- Inductively Coupled Plasma the most important
technique - Advantages of plasma
- Simultaneous multi-element Analysis saves
sample amount - Some non-metal determination (Cl, Br, I, and S)
- Concentration range of several decades (105
106) - Disadvantages of plasma
- very complex Spectra - hundreds to thousands of
lines - High resolution and expensive optical components
- Expensive instruments, highly trained personnel
required
5010A Plasam Source AES
- Plasma
- an electrically conducting gaseous mixture
containing significant concentrations of cations
and electrons. - Three main types
- Inductively Coupled Plasma (ICP)
- Direct Current Plasma (DCP)
- Microwave Induced Plasma (MIP)
51ICP
- Inductively Coupled Plasma (ICP)
- Plasma generated in a device called a Torch
- Torch up to 1" diameter
- Ar cools outer tube, defines plasma shape
- Rapid tangential flow of argon cools outer quartz
and centers plasma - Rate of Argon Consumption 5 - 20 L/Min
- Radio frequency (RF) generator 27 or 41 MHz up to
2 kW - Telsa coil produces initiation spark
- Ions and e- interact with magnetic field and
begin to flow in a circular motion. - Resistance to movement (collisions of e- and
cations with ambient gas) leads to ohmic heating. - Sample introduction is analogous to atomic
absorption.
52Sample introduction
- Nebulizer
- Electrothermal vaporizer
- Table 8-2 methods of sample introducton
53Nebulizer
- convert solution to fine spray or aerosol
- Ultrasonic nebulizer
- uses ultrasound waves to "boil" solution flowing
across disc - Pneumatic nebulizer
- uses high pressure gas to entrain solution
54Electro-thermal vaporizer ETV
- Electrothermal vaporizer (ETV)
- electric current rapidly heats crucible
containing sample - sample carried to atomizer by gas (Ar, He)
- only for introduction, not atomization
55Plasma structure
- Brilliant white core
- Ar continuum and lines
- Flame-like tail
- up to 2 cm
- Transparent region
- where measurements are made (no continuum)
56Plasma characteristics
- Hotter than flame (10,000 K) - more complete
atomization/ excitation - Atomized in "inert" atmosphere
- Ionization interference small due to high density
of e- - Sample atoms reside in plasma for 2 msec and
- Plasma chemically inert, little oxide formation
- Temperature profile quite stable and uniform.
57DC plasma
- First reported in 1920s
- DC current (10-15 A) flows between C anodes and W
cathode - Plasma core at 10,000 K, viewing region at 5,000
K - Simpler, less Ar than ICP - less expensive
- Less sensitive than ICP
- Should replace the carbon anodes in several hours
58Atomic Emission Spectrometer
- May be gt1,000 visible lines (lt1 Å) on continuum
- Need
- higher resolution (lt0.1 Å)
- higher throughput
- low stray light
- wide dynamic range (gt1,000,000)
- precise and accurate wavelength
calibration/intensities - stability
- computer controlled
- Three instrument types
- sequential (scanning and slew-scanning)
- Multichannel - Measure intensities of a large
number of elements (50-60) simultaneously - Fourier transform FT-AES
59Desirable properties of an AE spectrometer
60Sequential vs. multichannel
- Sequential instrument
- PMT moved behind aperture plate,
- or grating prism moved to focus new l on exit
slit - Pre-configured exit slits to detect up to 20
lines, slew scan - characteristics
- Cheaper
- Slower
- Multichannel instrument
- Polychromators (not monochromator) - multiple
PMT's - Array-based system
- charge-injection device/charge coupled device
- characteristics
- Expensive ( gt 80,000)
- Faster
61Sequential vs. multichannel
62Sequential monochromator
- Slew-scan spectrometers
- even with many lines, much spectrum contains no
information - rapidly scanned (slewed) across blank regions
(between atomic emission lines) - From 165 nm to 800 nm in 20 msec
- slowly scanned across lines
- 0.01 to 0.001 nm increment
- computer control/pre-selected lines to scan
63Slew scan spectrometer
- Two slew-scan gratings
- Two PMTs for VIS and UV
- Most use holographic grating
64Scanning echelle spectrometer
- PMT is moved to monitor signal from slotted
aperture. - About 300 photo-etched slits
- 1 second for moving one slit
- Can be used as multi channel spectrometer
- Mostly with DC plasma source
65AES instrument types
- Three instrument types
- sequential (scanning and slew-scanning)
- Multichannel - Measure intensities of a large
number of elements (50-60) simultaneously - Fourier transform FT-AES
66Multichannel polychromator AES
- Rowland circle
- Quantitative det.
- 20 more elements
- Within 5 minutes
In 10 minutes
67Applications of AES
- AES relatively insensitive
- small excited state population at moderate
temperature - AAS still used more than AES
- less expensive/less complex instrumentation
- lower operating costs
- greater precision
- In practice 60 elements detectable
- 10 ppb range most metals
- Li, K, Rb, Cs strongest lines in IR
- Large of lines, increase chance of overlap
68Detection power of ICP-AES
69ICP/OES INTERFERENCES
- Spectral interferences
- caused by background emission from continuous or
recombination phenomena, - stray light from the line emission of high
concentration elements, - overlap of a spectral line from another element,
- or unresolved overlap of molecular band spectra.
- Corrections
- Background emission and stray light compensated
for by subtracting background emission determined
by measurements adjacent to the analyte
wavelength peak. - Correction factors can be applied if interference
is well characterized - Inter-element corrections will vary for the same
emission line among instruments because of
differences in resolution, as determined by the
grating, the entrance and exit slit widths, and
by the order of dispersion.
70Physical interferences of ICP
- cause
- effects associated with the sample nebulization
and transport processes. - Changes in viscosity and surface tension can
cause significant inaccuracies, - especially in samples containing high dissolved
solids - or high acid concentrations.
- Salt buildup at the tip of the nebulizer,
affecting aerosol flow rate and nebulization. - Reduction
- by diluting the sample
- or by using a peristaltic pump,
- by using an internal standard
- or by using a high solids nebulizer.
71Interferences of ICP
- Chemical interferences
- include molecular compound formation, ionization
effects, and solute vaporization effects. - Normally, these effects are not significant with
the ICP technique. - Chemical interferences are highly dependent on
matrix type and the specific analyte element.
72Memory interferences
- When analytes in a previous sample contribute to
the signals measured in a new sample. - Memory effects can result
- from sample deposition on the uptake tubing to
the nebulizer - from the build up of sample material in the
plasma torch and spray chamber. - The site where these effects occur is dependent
on the element and can be minimized - by flushing the system with a rinse blank between
samples. - High salt concentrations can cause analyte signal
suppressions and confuse interference tests.
73Typical Calibration ICP curves
74Calibration curves of ICP-AES
7510B. Arc and Spark AES
- Arc and Spark Excitation Sources
- Limited to semi-quantitative/qualitative analysis
(arc flicker) - Usually performed on solids
- Largely displaced by plasma-AES
- Electric current flowing between two C electrodes
76Carbon electrodes
- Sample pressed into electrode or mixed with Cu
powder and pressed - Briquetting (pelleting) - Cyanogen bands (CN) 350-420 nm occur with C
electrodes in air -He, Ar atmosphere - Arc/spark unstable
- each line measured gt20 s
- needs multichannel detection
77Arc and Spark spectrograph
78spectrograph
- Beginning 1930s
- photographic film
- Cheap
- Long integration times
- Difficult to develop/analyze
- Non-linearity of line "darkness
- Gamma function
- Plate calibration
79Multichannel photoelectric spectrometer
- multichannel PMT instruments
- for rapid determinations (lt20 lines) but not
versatile - For routine analysis of solids
- metals, alloys, ores, rocks, soils
- portable instruments
- Multichannel charge transfer devices
- Recently on the market
- Orignally developed for plasma sources
80Comparison Between Atomic Absorption and
Emission Spectroscopy
- Absorption
- - Measure trace metal concentrations in
complex matrices . - - Atomic absorption depends upon
the number of ground state - atoms .
- Emission
- - Measure trace metal concentrations
in complex matrices . - - Atomic emission depends upon the number of
excited atoms .
81- - It measures the radiation
absorbed by the ground state atoms. - - Presence of a light source ( HCL )
. - - The temperature in the atomizer is
adjusted to atomize the analyte atoms in
the ground state only.
- - It measures the radiation
emitted by the excited atoms . - - Absence of the light source .
- - The temperature in the atomizer is big
enough to atomize the analyte atoms and
excite them to a higher energy level.