aas presentation

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AAS SPECTROSCOPY

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ATOMIC ABSORPTION SPECTROSCOPY

Atomic Absorption (AA) spectroscopy

• Atomic absorption spectroscopy is a quantitative method of analysis that is applicable to many metals and a few nonmetals.

• A few examples include: Al in blood serum Ca in blood serum, plants, soil, water Cu in alloys Cr in sea water Fe in plants

• Only a drop of sample needed• The metals need not be removed from other

components (AA is a highly selective technique)• Sensitive in the ppm range (even ppb with the right

equipment)

Principles of AAS

• When metals are exposed to heat, they absorb light.

• Each metal absorbs light at a characteristic frequency. For example:

Metal Zn Fe Cu Ca Naλ

(nm)214 248 325 423 589

• The metal vapor absorbs energy from an external light source, and electrons jump from the ground to the excited states

• The ratio of the transmitted to incident light energy is directly proportional to the concentration of metal atoms present

• A calibration curve can thus be constructed [Concentration (ppm) vs. Absorbance]

Use of each components of the AA spectrometer: fuel, atomizer, monochromatic light source, monochromatic detector, read out.

• A block diagram of the AA spectrometer appears below.

Overview of AA spectrometer.

Light Source Detector

SampleCompartment

• The source of light is a lamp whose cathode is composed of the element being measured.

• Each analyzed element requires a different lamp.• For example, a hollow cathode lamp for

Aluminum (Al) is shown below

• The cathode lamps are stored in a compartment inside the AA spectrometer. The specific lamp needed for a given metal analysis is rotated into position for a specific experiment.

• The sample is made up, typically in water• A flame is created, usually using ethyne &

oxygen (fuel)• The flame gases flowing into the burner create a

suction that pulls the liquid into the small tube from the sample container. This liquid is transferred to the flame where the sample is atomized [mixing the sample with air to create fine droplets]. The metal atoms then absorb light from the source (cathode lamp).

Sample is vaporized

in the flame.

Aspirator tube sucks thesample into the

flame in thesample

compartment.

Light beam

• The light passes through a monochromater (a device used to select a particular wavelength of light for observation)

• The intensity of the light is fairly low, so a photomultiplier tube (PMT) is used to boost the signal intensity

• A detector (a special type of transducer) is used to generate voltage from the impingement of electrons generated by the photomultiplier tube

A typical photomultiplier tube

• The read out specified by the user is displayed on the computer screen for each sample measured.

The resulting data can be presented in a variety of ways, but typically a print out is made.

Concentration of a solution from a calibration curve.

• AA can be used to identify the presence of an element (qualitative analysis), or the concentration of a metal (quantitative analysis)

• Quantitative analysis can be achieved by measuring the absorbance of a series of solutions of known concentration.

• A calibration curve and the equation for the line can be used to determine an unknown concentration based on its absorbance.

Disadvantages of AAS

only solutions can be analyzed relatively large sample quantities required (1-2mL) less sensitivity problems with refractory elements

Advantages of AAS

inexpensive (equipment, day-to-day

running high sample throughput easy to use high precision

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