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Furnaces atomic spectroscopy

Allen LB, Siitonen PH, Thompson HC Jr. 1998. Determination of copper, lead, and nickel in edible oils by plasma and furnace atomic spectroscopies. Journal of the American Oil Chemists Society 75(4) 477-481. [Pg.486]

Autosamplers in chromatography and graphite furnace atomic spectroscopy, for example, have improved injection precision by a factor of 3-10 compared with that attained by humans. [Pg.84]

A technique is any chemical or physical principle that can be used to study an analyte. Many techniques have been used to determine lead levels. For example, in graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy lead is atomized, and the ability of the free atoms to absorb light is measured thus, both a chemical principle (atomization) and a physical principle (absorption of light) are used in this technique. Chapters 8-13 of this text cover techniques commonly used to analyze samples. [Pg.36]

Two colorimetric methods are recommended for boron analysis. One is the curcumin method, where the sample is acidified and evaporated after addition of curcumin reagent. A red product called rosocyanine remains it is dissolved in 95 wt % ethanol and measured photometrically. Nitrate concentrations >20 mg/L interfere with this method. Another colorimetric method is based upon the reaction between boron and carminic acid in concentrated sulfuric acid to form a bluish-red or blue product. Boron concentrations can also be deterrnined by atomic absorption spectroscopy with a nitrous oxide—acetjiene flame or graphite furnace. Atomic emission with an argon plasma source can also be used for boron measurement. [Pg.231]

D. Wienke, T. Vijn and L. Buydens, Quality self-monitoring of intelligent analyzers and sensor based on an extended Kalman filter an application to graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy. Anal. Chem., 66 (1994) 841-849. [Pg.604]

G. Schlemmer and B. Radziuk, A Laboratory Guide to Graphite Furnace Analytical Atomic Spectroscopy, Springer-Verlag, Berlin (1998). [Pg.678]

Many of the published methods for the determination of metals in seawater are concerned with the determination of a single element. Single-element methods are discussed firstly in Sects. 5.2-5.73. However, much of the published work is concerned not only with the determination of a single element but with the determination of groups of elements (Sect. 5.74). This is particularly so in the case of techniques such as graphite furnace atomic absorption spectrometry, Zeeman background-corrected atomic absorption spectrometry, and inductively coupled plasma spectrometry. This also applies to other techniques, such as voltammetry, polarography, neutron activation analysis, X-ray fluroescence spectroscopy, and isotope dilution techniques. [Pg.128]

Grobenski Z, Lehmann R, Radzuck B, Voellkopf U (1984) The determination of trace metals in seawater using Zeeman graphite furnace AAS. In Atomic Spectroscopy Application Study No. 686 (1984) Papers presented at Pittsburgh Conference, Atlantic City, NJ, USA... [Pg.322]

FLAA, flame atomic absorption, is termed AAS in most instances in this book and in other places ICP, inductively coupled plasma AES, atomic emission spectroscopy GFAA, graphite furnace atomic absorption ICP-MS, ICP coupled to mass spectroscopy. [Pg.237]

High-performance liquid chromatography coupled with fluorescence detection [106, 107] or ion-exchange high-performance liquid chromatography with detection by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy [108] proved to be sensitive methods, but may lack from limitations in separation power and ease of identification of unknown products. [Pg.420]

The major anions and cations in seawater have a significant influence on most analytical protocols used to determine trace metals at low concentrations, so production of reference materials in seawater is absolutely essential. The major ions interfere strongly with metal analysis using graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy (GFAAS) and inductively coupled plasma mass spectroscopy (ICP-MS) and must be eliminated. Consequently, preconcentration techniques used to lower detection limits must also exclude these elements. Techniques based on solvent extraction of hydrophobic chelates and column preconcentration using Chelex 100 achieve these objectives and have been widely used with GFAAS. [Pg.50]

GFAAS Graphite Furnace Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy... [Pg.137]

Reed E, Sauerhoff S, Piorier MC. Quantitation of platinum-DNA binding in human tissues following therapeutic levels of drug exposure—a novel use of graphite furnace spectrometry. Atomic Spectroscopy 1988 9 93-95. [Pg.60]

Iron metal can be analyzed by x-ray spectroscopy, flame- and furnace atomic absorption, and ICP atomic emission spectroscopy at trace concentration levels. Other instrumental techniques include ICP-mass spectrometry for extreme low detection level and neutron activation analysis. [Pg.414]

Hansson HC, Ekholm AKP, Ross HB. 1988. Rainwater analysis A comparison between proton-induced x-ray emission and graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy. Environmental Science and Technology 22 527-531. [Pg.235]

In atomic spectroscopy, a substance is decomposed into atoms in a flame, furnace, or plasma. (A plasma is a gas that is hot enough to contain ions and free electrons.) Each element is measured by absorption or emission of ultraviolet or visible radiation by the gaseous atoms. To measure trace elements in a tooth, tiny portions of the tooth are vaporized (ablated) by a laser pulse1 and swept into a plasma. The plasma ionizes some of the atoms, which pass into a mass spectrometer that separates ions by their mass and measures their quantity. [Pg.453]

In atomic spectroscopy, analyte is atomized in a flame, an electrically heated furnace, or a plasma. Flames were used for decades, but they have been replaced by the inductively coupled plasma and the graphite furnace. We begin our discussion with flames because they are still common in teaching labs. [Pg.456]

Figure 21-6 An electrically heated graphite furnace for atomic spectroscopy (—38 mm long, in this case). [Courtesy Instrumentation Laboratory, Wiirrington, MA.]... Figure 21-6 An electrically heated graphite furnace for atomic spectroscopy (—38 mm long, in this case). [Courtesy Instrumentation Laboratory, Wiirrington, MA.]...
In atomic spectroscopy, absorption, emission, or fluorescence from gaseous atoms is measured. Liquids may be atomized by a plasma, a furnace, or a flame. Flame temperatures are usually in the range 2 300-3 400 K. The choice of fuel and oxidant determines the temperature of the flame and affects the extent of spectral, chemical, or ionization interference that will be encountered. Temperature instability affects atomization in atomic absorption and has an even larger effect on atomic emission, because the excited-state popula-... [Pg.470]


See other pages where Furnaces atomic spectroscopy is mentioned: [Pg.144]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.36]    [Pg.45]    [Pg.524]    [Pg.177]    [Pg.232]    [Pg.2206]    [Pg.625]    [Pg.443]    [Pg.448]    [Pg.455]    [Pg.23]    [Pg.231]    [Pg.537]    [Pg.247]    [Pg.537]    [Pg.10]    [Pg.43]    [Pg.463]    [Pg.465]    [Pg.471]    [Pg.686]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.437 ]




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