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Showing posts with label ATOMIC EMISSION. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ATOMIC EMISSION. Show all posts

Friday, 12 June 2015

ATOMIC EMISSION SPECTROSCOPY

ATOMIC EMISSION

Technique is also known as OPTICAL EMISSION SPECTROSCOPY (OES)
- The study of radiation emitted by excited atoms and
monatomic ions
- Relaxation of atoms in the excited state results in
emission of light
- Produces line spectra in the UV-VIS and the
vacuum UV regions
Used for qualitative identification of elements present
in the sample
- Also for quantitative analysis from ppm levels to percent
- Multielement technique
- Can be used to determine metals, metalloids, and some
nonmetals simultaneously
Emission wavelength and energy are related by
ΔE = hc/λ
- Does not require light source
- Excited atoms in the flame emit light that reaches the detector
(luminescence)
Techniques Based on Excitation Source
- Flame Photometry (flame OES)
- Furnace (Electrical Excitation)
- Inductively Coupled Plasma (ICP)

FLAME ATOMIC EMISSION SPECTROSCOPY
- Known as Flame OES
- Also called flame photometry
- Solutions containing metals (or some nonmetals) are
introduced into a flame
- Very useful for elements in groups 1A and 2A
INSTRUMENTATION OF FLAME OES
- No external lamp is needed
- Flame serves as both the atomization source and the
excitation source
Main Components
- Burner assembly
- Flame
- Wavelength selection device
- Detector

Burner Assembly
- The most commonly used is the Lundegarth or the premix burner
- Is the heart of the emission spectrometer
- Nebulizer introduces sample aerosol into the base of the flame
- Free atoms are formed and excited in flame
- Excited free atoms emit radiant energy
- Only about 5% of the aspirated sample reach the flame
General Process in Flame
- Liquid samples enter nebulizer
- Sample droplets of liquid enter flame
- Fine solid particles form
- Particles decompose to free atoms
- Excited atoms form
- Excited atoms relax and emit radiation
- Oxidation of atoms occur
Nebulizers commonly used
- Pneumatic
and
- Cross-flow
Wavelength Selection Device
Two wavelength selectors used
- Monochromators
and
 - Filters

Monochromators
- Diffraction grating is used as the dispersion element
Filters
- Good for detection of alkali metals due to simple spectrum
- Material is transparent over a narrow spectral range
- Desired radiation passes through filter and others are absorbed
- One element is determined at a time (single channel)
Multichannel Flame Photometers
- Two or more filters are used simultaneously
- Each filter transmits its designated radiation
- Detector is PMT
- Permits the use of internal standard calibration
Detectors
- PMT
- Solid-state detectors (CCD, CID)
- PDA
Flame Excitation Source
- Two gases (fuel and oxidant) are used
- Oxidant: air or nitrous oxide
- Fuel: acetylene (commonly used), propane, butane, natural gas
- Increase in flame temperature increases emission intensity
of most elements (exception: Na, K, Li)
Each element emits different characteristic wavelength of light
- Emission lines are characterized by wavelength and intensity
Emission intensity depends on
- Analyte element concentration in sample
- Rate of formation of excited atoms in flame
- Rate of introduction of sample into flame
- Flame composition
- Flame temperature
S = kN
S = intensity
k = proportionality constant
N = number of atoms in the excited state
- Increasing temperature increases N
- Atomic emission spectrometry is very sensitive to temperature
- Temperature must be carefully controlled for quantitative analysis

Elements with emission lines at shorter wavelengths give weak
emission intensity at low temperature
- High-temperature nitrous oxide-acetylene flame is used for
such elements
- High-energy electrical or plasma excitation sources may
also be used
- Ratio of fuel to oxidant also affects emission intensity
- The highest temperature is achieved when stoichiometric
mixture is used
INTERFERENCE
Two Classes
- Spectral interference
and
- Nonspectral interference
Spectral Interference
Two types
Background Radiation
- Broad band emission by excited molecules and radicals in flame
Overlapping emission lines
- Emission by different elements of the same wavelength as
the analyte element
Nonspectral Interference
Chemical Interference
- Occurs if anions that combine strongly with analyte element
are present in sample
Excitation Interference
- Result of collisions between unexcited atoms of an element with
excited atoms of a different element in sample
Ionization Interference
- Occurs when atoms ionize in flame and cannot emit atomic λs
APPLICATIONS OF FLAME OES
- For measurement of alkali metals in clinical samples such as
serum and urine
- Excellent method for qualitative determination of multiple
elements in sample
- Characteristic emission lines of analyte are compared
with literature (appendix 7.1)
- Also used for quantitative analysis (application of Beer’s Law)
- Deviation from linearity is generally observed at
high concentrations
- More free atoms are liberated in organic solvents than
in aqueous solutions
- Implies emission intensity is relatively higher in
nonaqueous solutions
- Atomization is exothermic and rapid in organic solvents
- Atomization is endothermic and relatively slow in aqueous
solutions
- External calibrations and standard addition methods are used