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Title: Chem 551 :Instrumental Methods of Analysis


1
Chem 551 Instrumental Methods of Analysis
Ralph Allen
2
Instrumental Analysis
  • There is much more than the Instrument
  • Consider forensic analysis

3
Analytical chemistry and the fight against
crime and terrorism



FBI National Academy
4
First, there was one.
5
CSI is coming to life as a video game USA
TODAY
Now, it's everywhere!
  • Forensic Files (Court TV)
  • I, Detective (Court TV)
  • Investigative Reports (AE)
  • American Justice (AE)
  • Cold Case Files (AE)
  • Justice Files (Discovery)
  • The F.B.I. Files (Discovery)
  • The New Detectives (Discovery)
  • Historys Crimes and Trials (History)
  • FBI The Untold Stories (History)
  • Secrets of Forensic Science (TLC)
  • Medical Detectives (TLC)
  • Secrets of the Dead (PBS)
  • NClS

6
What do you know about the criminal justice
system?A NothingB What I learned
from televisionC First hand experience
(arrested )
7
Federal Rules of Evidence
  • Rule 104 Questions of admissibility generally -
    Qualification of the person to be a witness, or
    admissibility of evidence. Relevance conditioned
    on fact.
  • Rule 403 Although relevant evidence may be
    excluded if probative value is substantially
    outweighed by danger of unfair prejudice,
    confusion, misleading the jury, or needless
    presentation of cumulative evidence.

8
Federal Rules of Evidence
  • Rule 702 If scientific, technical, or other
    specialized knowledge will assist the trier of
    fact, a witness qualified as an expert by
    knowledge, skill, experience, training, or
    education may testify.
  • Rule 703 The facts or data in a particular case
    upon which an expert bases an opinion may be
    those perceived by or made known to the expert
    at, or before, the hearing. If reasonably relied
    upon, the facts or data need not be admissible in
    evidence.

9
The Frye Rule
  • , the thing from which the deduction is made
    must be sufficiently established to have gained
    general acceptance in the particular field in
    which it belongs.

10
Daubert Rule
  • Does the theory or technique involve testable
    hypotheses?
  • Has the theory or technique been subject to peer
    review and publication?
  • Are there known or potential error rates and are
    there standards controlling the techniques
    operation?, and
  • Is the method or technique generally accepted in
    the scientific community?

11
ENVS 470
  • One of my other jobs is as Director of
    Environmental Health and Safety
  • Measuring pollutants emitted by UVa in the air,
    water, or shipped out as waste

12
Instrumental Analysis
  • There is much more than the Instrument
  • You are the analyst

13
What do you do with
  • This white powder (is it an illegal drug or
    anthrax or what)
  • This sludge from the powerplant in Tennessee

14
Could you take a look at this white powder?You
are the analyst. What questions would you ask???
15
Why are you taking this class?A an easy AB
interestingC to learn
16
What do you want to learn?
17
What do I expect of you?
  • Attend class on time (you will be allowed only 3
    late or missed classes)
  • Pay attention (no games on your computers or
    reading Cav Daily)
  • Attendance will be taken early with iClickers
  • No text so your only expense is the Clicker

18
What do I expect of you?
  • You will form a group with people that you can
    meet with on a regular basis
  • Your group will make at least one presentation to
    help guide the class through some subject
  • You will have a special project to present orally
    and with a written report

19
Analytical Chemistry
  • art of recognizing different substances
    determining their constituents, takes a prominent
    position among the applications of science, since
    the questions it enables us to answer arise
    wherever chemical processes are present.
  • 1894 Wilhelm Ostwald

20
For this course
  • Why bother doing any kind of analysis unless you
    are trying to learn something

21
Off flavor cake mix (10)
  • Send it off for analysis
  • Do simple extractions
  • Separation and identification by GC/MS
  • Over 100 peaks but problem was in a valley
    between peaks (compare)
  • Iodocresol at ppt
  • Eliminate iodized salt that reacted with food
    coloring (creosolmethyl phenol)

22
Techniques
  • mass spectrometry
  • NMR
  • spectroscopy (UV, IR, AA)
  • chromatography (GC, HPLC)
  • measure radioactivity, crystallography, PCR, gas
    phase analysis

23
You dont need a course to tell you how to run an
instrument
  • They are all different and change
  • Most of you wont be analysts
  • We will talk about experimental design
  • Learn about the choices available and the basics
    of techniques

24
What I think you will learn
  • analytical process and skills
  • tools for research
  • solve practical problems
  • medical uses (including DNA)
  • how instruments work and general concepts
  • environmental and forensic applications
  • new advances

25
Organized as teams --but you are responsible for
your learning!
  • Your project will be to take a crime scene and
    determine what physical evidence you would have,
    and how you would do the analysis.

26
How do you know if you have the correct answer
  • A Hope for the best
  • B Run standards to see if you can get them
    correct
  • C Compare the results with the values that
    result from other techniques
  • D Use a technique that others have used and
    gotten good results

27
Pan Am 10385 of the Maid of the
Searecovered16,000 pieces of
propertyrecovered
28

29
Instrumental Analysis
  • There is much more than the Instrument
  • You are the analyst

30
Questions to ask???
  • Why? Is sample representative
  • What is host matrix?
  • Impurities to be measured and approximate
    concentrations
  • Range of quantities expected
  • Precision accuracy required

31
More things to ask.
  • Where is analysis to be conducted
  • How many samples (per day total)
  • How soon are results needed
  • Are there standards (analytical QC)
  • Long term reliability
  • Form of answer required
  • Special facilities available

32
The Analytical Approach
  • Identify the problem.what do you want to know
  • What instrumental methods can provide necessary
    results
  • Which method is best
  • What do the results mean

33
Characterization of Properties
  • chemical state
  • structure
  • orientation
  • interactions
  • general properties

34
Reason to understand how an instrument works
  • What results can be obtained
  • What kind of materials can be characterized
  • Where can errors arise

35
Where to see Power Points
  • http//ehs.virginia.edu/ralphs_chemistry_courses/5
    51/
  • Or go to Collab site

36
Design of instrumentation to probe a material
  • Signal Generation-sample excitation
  • Input transducer-detection of analytical signal
  • Signal modifier-separation of signals or
    amplification
  • Output transducer-translation interpretation

37
Molecular Methods
  • macro Vs micro
  • pure samples Vs mixtures
  • qualitative Vs quantitative
  • surface Vs bulk
  • large molecules (polymers, biomolecules)

38
Molecular SpectroscopyIR, UV-Vis, MS, NMR
  • What are interactions with radiation
  • Means of excitation (light sources)
  • Separation of signals (dispersion)
  • Detection (heat, excitation, ionization,
    molecule)
  • Interpretation (qualitative easier than
    quantitative)

39
Elemental Analysis
  • bulk, micro, contamination (matrix)
  • matrix effects
  • qualitative Vs quantitative
  • complete or specific element
  • chemical state

40
Extreme trace elemental analysis
  • Direct instrumental determination - multi-element
    - direct excitation---should be least expensive
  • These are relative physical methods requiring
    appropriate standards systematic errors like
    spectral interferences occur
  • NAA, XRF, sputtered neutral MS

41
Extreme trace elemental analysis
  • Multi-stage procedures --- sample separation
    and preparation before quantitation
  • Standards are less of a problem
  • Time consuming subject to losses or
    contamination
  • Chromatography coupled with analysis

42
Comparing MethodsWhat is important?
43
What are important factors in Comparing
Analytical Methods
  • A Detection limits
  • B Dynamic range
  • C Possible Interferences
  • D Simplicity
  • E All of the above

44
Comparing Methods
  • cost
  • sensitivity
  • accuracy/precision
  • time
  • compatibility
  • conditions
  • availability

45
An analytical checklist
  • Have the analytical tasks and goals been defined?
  • Have issues of sampling been defined?(eg. size,
    homogeneity, composites)
  • Are there facilities for sample storage (custody)
    available and is there a means of identification
    and retreival)

46
Checklist 2
  • Is pretreatment (eg. extraction, dissolution)
    necessary? (facilities, equipment, reagents)
  • Is the sample analyzed representative? (mixing,
    weighing, size)
  • Are the instruments appropriate for the required
    measurements? (sensitivity, sample state)

47
Checklist 3
  • What is the time required for each analysis?
  • What expertise is needed to prepare, analyze, and
    interpret?
  • How is data captured, calculated, presented, and
    stored for future comparisons?
  • Are there appropriate quality controls?
  • Define time line for tasks and analysis and then
    calculate overall costs

48
Statisticsare no substitute for judgment
  • Common sense put into a mathematical form
  • Analysis of results - accuracy precision
  • Elimination of errors
  • Detection limits - signal to noise
  • Chemometrics - what do the results mean

49
  • Accuracy and precision are both needed when you
    have a very limited amount of sample to analyze
  • A is true
  • B is false

50
There is a difference - you
need both
51
Errors in Analytical Measurements
  • Determinant - unidirectional errors ascribable to
    a definite cause
  • Indeterminate - uncertainties from unknown or
    uncontrollable factors - generally random -
    noise

52
Systematic errors - sources
  • Inhomogeneity - handling storage
  • Contamination - sampling to reagents
  • Adsorption on surface or volatilization
  • Unwanted or incomplete chemical reactions
  • Matrix effects on generation of analytical signal
  • Incorrect standards or calibration

53
Recognition of systematic errors
  • Reproducibility gives NO information on accuracy
    (high std. dev. hints at problems)
  • Make comparisons with other methods
  • Check standard reference materials (available
    from NIST)
  • Run blanks (be sure background is small and
    reproducible)

54
Errors in Analytical Measurements
  • Determinant - unidirectional errors ascribable to
    a definite cause
  • Indeterminate - uncertainties from unknown or
    uncontrollable factors - generally random -
    noise

55
Gaussian Distribution
  • Random fluctuations
  • Bell shaped curve
  • Mean and standard deviation
  • 1sigma 68.3, 2sigma 95.5, 3sigma 99.7
  • Absolute Vs Relative standard deviation
  • Accuracy and its relationship to the measured mean

56
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Limit of detection
  • signal - output measured as difference between
    sample and blank (averages)
  • noise - std dev of the fluctuations of the
    instrument output with a blank

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Limit of detection
  • signal - output measured as difference between
    sample and blank (averages)
  • noise - std dev of the fluctuations of the
    instrument output with a blank
  • S/N 3 for limit of detection
  • S/N 10 for limit of quantitation

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Sources of Noise
  • Environmental - 60 Hz electrical, vibrational
    (shield)
  • Johnson (thermal) noise - random fluctuations in
    charge carriers (cool)
  • Shot noise - pulses
  • 1/f (flicker) noise - important at low frequencies

62
Noise Reduction
  • Avoid (cool, shield, etc.)
  • Electronically filter
  • Average
  • Mathematical smoothing
  • Fourier transform

63
If noise is random you know that
  • A you can use Gaussian Statistics
  • B you can collect data longer to average the
    noise
  • C you can determine the average and calculate
    the uncertainty in that value
  • D all of the above

64
Single channel scanning
  • 3 objects each measured 3 times (averaged to
    reduce noise)
  • Balance requires 9 measurements
  • Monochromator - broad band source to dispersive
    device and then wavelengths are selected one at a
    time
  • Increase intensity by scanning slower or
    increasing bandpass

65
Multidetector Spectrometer
  • Get 3 balances and measure all 3 samples
    simultaneously on separate balances
  • Can make measurements in 1/3 time or measure 3
    times as much (noise is random and proportional
    to square root of number of measurements)
  • Use of diode arrays instead of slits

66
Signal Transformation
  • Double pan balance - mesure multiple objects
    simultaneously measure linear combinations
  • y(1)X(1) X(2)
  • y(2)X(1) X(3)
  • y(3)X(2) X(3)
  • 3 equations 3 unknowns (each object measured
    twice in half the time)

67
The problem with making a measurement using a
double pan balance is..
  • A they are hard to use
  • B you need to determine the relationship
    between the angle of the pointer and the weight
    difference

68
Hadamard multiplexing (transform)
  • Use one detector and replace the slit with a mask
    of slits at certain locations (n)- some are open
    others closed (2n-1 slits in mask with just
    more than half open)
  • For n3 a mask of 11011 (1 is open) can be slid
    to give 110, 101, 011
  • Linear equations improve S/N

69
Fourier advantage
  • Put all weights on 2 pan balance at the same time
  • Change what is measured (not weights but angle of
    pointer showing difference in the 2 pans)
  • Z(1)X(1) X(2) - X(3)
  • Z(2)X(1) - X(2) X(3)
  • Z(3) -X(1) X(2) X(3)

70
h(t) a cos 2 pi freq. x time
  • sum cos(2pi((f1f2)/2)t
  • beat or difference cos(2pi((f1-f2)/2)t
  • 5104-sine-wa

71
Fourier transform - beat frequency (time domain)
  • We can sample the time domain at N equally spaced
    time intervals
  • Represent each measurement in terms of a series
    of frequencies
  • Decoding procedure to decode N algebraic
    equations
  • Fourier transform requires a computer

72
Good news / Bad newsAnthrax
73
INSTRUMENTATION
  • Look at some part of a molecule that has
    characteristic absorption of radiation (color)
  • IR / Raman
  • Look at the size of a molecule (separation in a
    vacuum mass spectroscopy)
  • Separation based on size or chemical affinity
    chromatography

74
Correlation Between Bonds and Absorption Peaks
Propanoic Acid
  • High wave number (4000 1500 cm-1) peaks are
    produced by X-H, XY, X Y (X, Y can be O,
    N, C) stretching --- Functional Group Region
  • Low wave number (1500-600 cm-1) peaks are
    produced by single bonds. --- Fingerprint Region

75
Portable Infrared (solids)
76
Portable IR
77
Raman
78
Laser excitation of solids or liquids/ Raman
79
Spectral interpretation
80
Portable Raman with computer for spectral
interpretation
81
Gas Chromatography/ Mass Spectrometry
82
QUADRUPOLE MASS SPECTROMETER
83
Quadrupole mass analyzer
84
New rapid response columns
85
Ion Chromatograph (sniffer)
86
Sample collector for dogs
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