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Atomic absorption spectrometry lamps/sources used

In atomic absorption spectrometry (AA) the sample is vaporized and the element of interest atomized at high temperatures. The element concentration is determined based on the attenuation or absorption by the analyte atoms, of a characteristic wavelength emitted from a light source. The light source is typically a hollow cathode lamp containing the element to be measured. Separate lamps are needed for each element. The detector is usually a photomultiplier tube. A monochromator is used to separate the element line and the light source is modulated to reduce the amount of unwanted radiation reaching the detector. [Pg.43]

The determination of technetium by atomic absorption spectrophotometry was studied with a Tc hollow-cathode lamp as a spectral line source. The sensitivity for technetium in aqueous solution was 3-10 g/ml in a fuel-rich acetylene-air flame for the unresolved 2614.23-2615.87 A doublet. Cationic interferences were eliminated by adding aluminum to the sample solutions. The applicability of atomic absorption spectrophotometry to the determination of technetium in uranium and a uranium alloy was demonstrated [42]. A detection limit of 6 10 g w as achieved for measuring technetium by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry. In using the same doublet and both argon and neon as fill gases for the lamp, 6-10 to 3 10 g of technetium was found to be the range of applicability [43]. [Pg.58]

The most important radiation sources in atomic absorption spectrometry are the hollow cathode lamps and electrodeless discharge lamps. Other sources which have been used are lasers, flames, analytical plasmas, and normal continuum sources like deuterium and xenon arc lamps. [Pg.35]

Spectrophotometric techniques have been the basis of many coal analysis methods. One of the most widely used techniques for analysis of trace elements is atomic absorption spectrometry, in which the standards and samples are aspirated into a flame. A hollow cathode lamp provides a source of radiation that is characteristic of the element of interest and the absorption of characteristic energy by the atoms of a particular element. X-ray fluorescence is also employed as a quantitative technique for trace element determination and depends on election of orbital electrons from atoms of the element when the sample is irradiated by an x-ray source. [Pg.206]

Detection systems for speciation have commonly consisted of atomic spectrometry instrumentation. One of the earliest techniques employed was flame atomic absorption spectrometry (EAAS). Sample is introduced into a flame using a pneumatic nebulizer system. The light source for atomic absorption is a low pressure (a few Torr) hollow cathode lamp (HCL) that includes a ceramic cylinder cathode coated with the pure metal or a compound of the analyte. Application of 150-300 V across the electrodes produces a plasma that results in a narrow atomic emission line that is absorbed by analyte atoms in the flame. EAAS instrumentation is relatively inexpensive and easily interfaced to chromatography systems. However, HCL-EAAS is characterized by relatively poor sensitivity that has limited its use for practical speciation analysis. [Pg.1085]

To a hmrted extent, atomic absorption spectrometry can also be used for multielement determinations. Several manufacturers introduced systems with multilamp turrets, where different lamps can be held under pre-heated conditions. Here, rapid switching from one lamp to another enables sequential multi-element determinations to be made by flame atomic absorption, for a maximum of around five elements. Simultaneous determinations are possible with multi-element lamps, however, the number of elements that can be brought together and used as a hollow cathode lamp with a sufficiently stable radiation output and lifetime is rather limited. The use of continuous sources facilitates flexible multi-element determinations for many elements in principle. It is necessary to use high-resolution spectrometers (e.g., echelle spectrometers) with multi-channel detection. CCDs of-... [Pg.199]


See other pages where Atomic absorption spectrometry lamps/sources used is mentioned: [Pg.334]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.362]    [Pg.334]    [Pg.30]    [Pg.294]    [Pg.42]    [Pg.732]    [Pg.153]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.167]    [Pg.2459]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.42]    [Pg.274]    [Pg.605]    [Pg.51]    [Pg.320]    [Pg.166]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.39]    [Pg.292]    [Pg.90]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.11 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.11 ]




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