A secondary discharge intensifies optical emission from a Mach disk extracted from an inductively coupled plasma
Abstract
The axial channel of a conventional argon inductively coupled plasma (ICP) is extracted through a circular orifice into an evacuated quartz chamber. Emission from the Mach disk region is focused on the entrance slit of an echelle spectrometer equipped with two segmented-array charge-coupled-device detectors. The background pressure in the extraction chamber is 1000 Pa (7.5 torr). At this pressure two barrel shocks and Mach disks are visible. Deliberate use of a mild secondary discharge between the plasma and the sampler enhances emission from the Mach disk for a variety of lines from typical analytes (Ca, Sr, Mg and Mn) by factors of 11 to 25. Detection limits are in the range 0.1–2 µg l–1. Sodium chloride at concentrations up to 10 000 mg l–1 induces only a modest loss (0–6%) of intensity for ion lines, in contrast to the much more severe matrix effects seen in ICP mass spectrometry.