Issue 10, 2001

Abstract

Single pulse laser ablation sampling with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) was assessed for accurate chemical analysis. Elemental fractionation (e.g. Pb/U), the quantity of ablated mass (crater volume), ICP-MS intensity and the particle contribution (spike signal) during single pulse ablation of NIST 610 glass were investigated. Pb/U fractionation significantly changed between the first and second laser pulse and showed strong irradiance dependence. The Pb/U ratio obtained by the first pulse was usually higher than that of the second pulse, with the average value close to the representative level. Segregation during laser ablation is proposed to explain the composition change between the first and second pulse. Crater volume measurements showed that the second pulse produced significantly more ablated mass. A roll-off of the crater depth occurred at ∼750 GW cm−2. The absolute ICP-MS intensity from the second pulse showed no correlation with crater depth. Particle induced spikes on the transit signal showed irradiance and elemental species dependence.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
13 Feb 2001
Accepted
09 Jul 2001
First published
17 Sep 2001

J. Anal. At. Spectrom., 2001,16, 1115-1120

Representative sampling using single-pulse laser ablation with inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry

H. Liu, X. Mao and R. E. Russo, J. Anal. At. Spectrom., 2001, 16, 1115 DOI: 10.1039/B101421H

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