Title: Optical Atomic Spectroscopy
1Optical Atomic Spectroscopy
- Optical Spectrometry
- Absorption
- Emission
- Fluorescence
- Mass Spectrometry
- X-Ray Spectrometry
2Optical Atomic Spectroscopy
- Atomic spectra single external electron
Slightly different in energy
3(No Transcript)
4Atomic spectrum Mg
Spins are paired No split
Spins are unpaired Energy splitting
Singlet ground state
Triplet excited state
Singlet excited state
5Atomic spectroscopy
- Emission
- Absorption
- Fluorescence
6Line Broadening
- Uncertainty Effects
- Heisenberg uncertainty principle
- The nature of the matter places limits on the
precision with which certain pairs of physical
measurements can be made. - One of the important forms Heisenberg
uncertainty principle - ?t?? 1 p156
- To determine ?? with negligibly small
uncertainty, a huge measurement time is required. - Natural line width
7Douglas A. Skoog, et al. Principles of
Instrumental Analysis, Thomson, 2007
8Line Broadening
- Doppler broadening
- Doppler shift
- The wavelength of radiation emitted or absorbed
by a rapidly moving atom decreases if the motion
is toward a transducer, and increases if the
motion is receding from the transducer. -
-
- In flame, Doppler broadening is much larger than
natural line width
9Line Broadening
10Line Broadening
- Pressure broadening
- Caused by collisions of the emitting or
absorbing species with other ions or atoms - High pressure Hg and xenon lamps, continuum
spectra
11Temperature Effects
- Bolzmann equation
-
- Effects on AAS, AFS, and AES
12Atomic spectroscopy
- Interaction of an atom in the gas phase with EMR
- Samples are solids, liquids and gases but usually
not ATOMS!
13Atomic Spectroscopy
- Sample Introduction
- Flame
- Furnace
- ICP
- Sources for Atomic Absorption/Fluorescence
- Hollow Cathode Lams
- Sources for Atomic Emission
- Flames
- Plasmas
- Wavelength Separators Slits Detectors
14How to get things to atomize?
15How to get samples into the instruments?
16Sample Introduction
- Pneumatic Nebulizers
- Break the sample solution into small droplets.
- Solvent evaporates from many of the droplets.
- Most (gt99) are collected as waste
- The small fraction that reach the plasma have
been de-solvated to a great extent.
17What is a nebulizer?
SAMPLE AEROSOL
18Concentric Tube
19Cross-flow
20Fritted-disk
21Babington
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24(No Transcript)
25What happens inside the flame?
26FLAMES
Rich in free atoms
27FLAMES
T ? E
28GOOD AND BAD THINGS
oxidation
29Boltzmann Equation Relates Excited State
Population/Ground State Population Ratios to
Energy, Temperature and Degeneracy
30Flame AAS/AES Spray Chamber/Burner Configurations
- Samples are nebulized (broken into small
droplets) as they enter the spray chamber via a
wire capillary - Only about 5 reach the flame
- Larger droplets are collected
- Some of the solvent evaporates
- Flow spoilers
- Cheaper, somewhat more rugged
- Impact beads
- Generally greater sensitivity
31(No Transcript)
32ElectroThermal AAS (ETAAS or GFAAS)
- The sample is contained in a heated, graphite
furnace. - The furnace is heated by passing an electrical
current through it (thus, it is electro thermal).
- To prevent oxidation of the furnace, it is
sheathed in gas (Ar usually) - There is no nebulziation, etc. The sample is
introduced as a drop (usually 5-20 uL), slurry or
solid particle (rare)
33ElectroThermal AAS (ETAAS or GFAAS)
- The furnace goes through several steps
- Drying (usually just above 110 deg. C.)
- Ashing (up to 1000 deg. C)
- Atomization (Up to 2000-3000 C)
- Cleanout (quick ramp up to 3500 C or so). Waste
is blown out with a blast of Ar. - The light from the source (HCL) passes through
the furnace and absorption during the atomization
step is recorded over several seconds. This makes
ETAAS more sensitive than FAAS for most elements.
34(No Transcript)
35(No Transcript)
36(No Transcript)
37(No Transcript)
38Radiation Sources for AAS
- Hollow Cathode Lamp
- Conventional HCL
-
39Ne or Ar at 1-5 Torr
40(No Transcript)
41- Hollow Cathode Lamp (Contd)
- a tungsten anode and a cylindrical cathode
- neon or argon at a pressure of 1 to 5 torr
- The cathode is constructed of the metal whose
spectrum is desired or served to support a layer
of that metal
- Ionize the inert gas at a potential of 300 V
- Generate a current of 5 to 15 mA as ions and
electrons migrate to the electrodes.
- The gaseous cations acquire enough kinetic energy
to dislodge some of the metal atoms from the
cathode surface and produce an atomic cloud. - A portion of sputtered metal atoms is in excited
states and thus emits their characteristic
radiation as they return to the ground sate - Eventually, the metal atoms diffuse back to the
cathode surface or to the glass walls of the tube
and are re-deposited
42- Hollow Cathode Lamp (Contd)
- High potential, and thus high currents lead to
greater intensities - Doppler broadening of the emission lines from the
lamp - Self-absorption the greater currents produce an
increased number of unexcited atoms in the cloud.
The unexcited atoms, in turn, are capable of
absorbing the radiation emitted by the excited
ones. This self-absorption leads to lowered
intensities, particular at the center of the
emission band -
- Doppler broadening ?
43- Improvement.
- Most direct method of obtaining improved lamps
for the emission of more intense atomic resonance
lines is to separate the two functions involving
the production and excitation of atomic vapor - Boosted discharge hollow-cathode lamp (BDHCL) is
introduced as an AFS excitation source by
Sullivan and Walsh. - It has received a great deal of attention and a
number of modifications to this type of source
have been conducted.
44- Boosted discharge hollow-cathode lamp (BDHCL)
45- Operation principle of BDHCL
- A secondary discharge (boost) is struck between
an efficient electron emitter and the anode,
passing through the primary atom cloud. - The second discharge does not produce too much
extra atom vapor by sputtering the walls of the
hollow cathode, but does increase significantly
the efficiency in the excitation of sputtered
atom vapor. - This greatly reduces the self-absorption
resulting from simply increasing the operating
potential (increase Doppler broadening and
self-absorption) to the primary anode and
cylindrical cathode. -
46- Electrodeless Discharge Lamps (EDL)
47- Electrodeless discharge lamps (EDL)
- Constructed from a sealed quartz tube containing
a few torr of an inert gas such as argon and a
small quantity of the metal of interest (or its
salt). - The lamp does not contain an electrode but
instead is energized by an intense field of
radio-frequency or microwave radiation. - Radiant intensities usually one or two orders of
magnitude greater than the normal HCLs. - The main drawbacks their performance does not
appear to be as reliable as that of the HCL lamps
(signal instability with time) and they are only
commercially available for some elements.
48(No Transcript)
49Single-beam design
50DOUBLE BEAM FAA SPECTROMETER
51Interferences in AAS and AFS
- Spectral Interferences
- Overlapping
- Broadening absorption for air/fuel mixture
- Scattering or absorption by sample matrix
52Background Correction
- Two-line Correction (like Internal Standard)
- Continuum-Source Correction
- Zeeman Effect
- Source Self-Reversal (Smith Hieftje)
53Continuum-Source Correction
54Continuum-Source Correction
55(The draw is not to scale)
A
B
0.04 nm
The light from the HCL is absorbed by both the
sample and the background, but the light from the
D2 lamp is absorbed almost entirely by the
background A HCL lamp, the shaded portion shows
the light absorbed from the HCL. The emission has
a much narrower line width than the absorption
line. B D2 lamp, the shaded portion shows the
light absorbed by D2 lamp. The lamp emission is
much broader than the sample absorption, and an
averaged absorbance taken over the whole band
pass of the monochromator.
56Zeeman Effect Background Correction
57Source Self-Reversal (Smith Hieftje)
Self-absorption Line broadening
A relative new technique
58Source Self-Reversal (Smith Hieftje)
Absorbed by sample reduced, not complete
eliminate! But the background absorbs the same
portion of light.
Absorbed by sample and background
Vandecasteele and Block, 1997, p126
59Interferences in AAS and AFS
- Chemical Interferences
- Formation of compounds of low volatility
- Calcium analysis in the presence of Sulfate or
phosphate - Solutions
- Higher temperature
- Releasing agents cations that react
preferntially with the interference ions. - Protection agents form stable but volatile
species with the analytes (i.e. EDTA,APDC.)
60- Chemical Interferences
- Atom ionization
- M ? M e
61- Atomic Fluorescence Spectrometry
Commercial AFS instruments are on the
market! Learn more in CHM 6157