Effect of acids, modifiers and chloride on the atomization of aluminium in electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry
Abstract
The effect of HNO3, HCl and H2SO4, as well as various modifiers, Mg(NO3)2, Pd(NO3)2, Ca(NO3)2 and NH4H2PO4, on the atomization of aluminium from a L'vov platform in electrothermal atomic absorption spectrometry was investigated. No interference was observed on the integrated absorbance of Al from any acid studied. The m0 observed for 10 µg l–1(200 pg) Al aqueous solution, prepared by diluting a commercial Al stock solution with doubly de-ionized water, was much poorer than expected, owing to a failure to transfer Al to the furnace, it could be corrected by adding as little as 0.25% v/v of a mineral acid. The expected m0 for Al was unaffected by modifiers such as Mg(NO3)2, Pd(NO3)2, Ca(NO3)2 and NH4H2PO4. Addition of either calcium, magnesium, or palladium nitrates produced a sharper absorbance peak, and Al was delayed in appearance. Either Ca(NO3)2 or Mg(NO3)2 can stabilize Al during pyrolysis, allowing a very high (> 1700 °C) thermal pretreatment temperature to be used. However, multiple atomization peaks were observed when using Mg(NO3)2. The multiple peaks became more troublesome as the tube aged. Calcium nitrate is recommended as a better modifier for those samples (e.g., bone) in which Ca is a large component of the matrix. A serious interference from chloride salts varied with chloride concentration, pH and pyrolysis temperature. This ‘suppressive’ interference from chloride was overcome by using Ca(NO3)2 as a modifier in HNO3, and a pyrolysis temperature in excess of 1400 °C.
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