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Adventures in Sample Introduction for ICP-OES and ICP-MS

Adventures in Sample Introduction for ICP-OES and ICP-MS. Geoffrey N. Coleman Meinhard Glass Products A Division of Analytical Reference Materials International. Sample Introduction Components. ICP Torches Spray Chambers Nebulizers Conventional High Efficiency Direct injection

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Adventures in Sample Introduction for ICP-OES and ICP-MS

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  1. Adventures in Sample Introduction for ICP-OES and ICP-MS Geoffrey N. Coleman Meinhard Glass Products A Division of Analytical Reference Materials International

  2. Sample Introduction Components • ICP Torches • Spray Chambers • Nebulizers • Conventional • High Efficiency • Direct injection • Accessories

  3. Overview • Brief review • Components • Torches • Spray chambers • Nebulizers • What’s new....

  4. References Richard F. Browner, Georgia Institute of Technology Anders G.T. Gustavsson, Swedish Institute of Technology Jean-Michel Mermet, Universite Claude Bernard-Lyon, France Akbar Montaser, George Washington University John W. Olesik, Ohio State University Barry L. Sharp, Macauley Land Use Institute, Scotland “Pneumatic Nebulizers and Spray Chambers for Inductively Coupled Plasma Spectroscopy”, Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry, 1988, 3, 613 – 652 (Part 1); 939 – 963 (Part 2).

  5. Processes Starting with a “homogeneous” solution sample.... • Nebulization • Desolvation • Dissociation • Excitation All require energy and time. There is a “domino” effect.

  6. Interferences • Nebulization • Desolvation • Dissociation • Excitation Probably 85% of significant interferences occur at nebulization, due to changes in surface tension, density, and viscosity. These are multiplicative interferences.

  7. 1.5 0.45 0.5 3 ù h é ù é 10 Q é ù 585 s l d + 597 = ê ú ê ú ê ú 3,2 ë û V r Q 0.5 ë û ( sr ) ë û g Mean Droplet Size NUKIYAMA AND TANASAWA EQUATION d3,2 = Sauter mean diameter - (m) V = Velocity difference of gas-liquid - (m/s)  = Surface tension - (dyn/cm)  = Liquid density - (g/cm3)  = Liquid viscosity - (Poise or dyn·s/cm2) Ql = Volume flowrate, liquid - (cm3/s) Qg = Volume flowrate, gas - (cm3/s) S. Nukiyama and Y. Tanasawa, Trans. Soc. Mech. Eng., Tokyo, 1938-40, Vol. 4 – 6, Reports 1 – 6.

  8. Rule-of-Thumb When the Total Dissolved Solids exceeds about 1000 ppm, changes in surface tension, density, and viscosity begin to affect the droplet size distribution and, thus, the slope of the analytical calibration curve.

  9. Interferences Control by: • Matrix Removal – usually not practical • Swamping – risk of contamination • Matrix Matching – probably most useful • Internal Standard – line selection • Method of Standard Additions – most tedious and time-consuming

  10. Single Droplet Studies Desolvation begins Evaporation from surface Droplet diameter diminishes Crust forms as solvent evaporates Internal pressure builds Droplet explodes Escaping water vapor cools immediate surroundings Particles dehydrate Particles evaporate

  11. Implications • Large Surface Area/Volume • Small Droplets • Faster desolvation and vaporization • Narrow Size Distribution • Consistent desolvation and vaporization • Well-defined excitation/observation zones • Virtually no signal comes from droplets larger than 8 - 10 m • Most signal comes from < 3 m.

  12. ICP Plasma Torches • Tg 6000 – 9000 K • Skin Effect • Electric • Magnetic • Pressure/Temperature • Injection Velocity 3 – 5 m/sec to overcome skin effects Injector diameter 1.0 – 2.4 mm i.d. Carrier at 0.7 – 1.0 L/min • Residence Time • Highly Volatile Solvents • Chemical Interferences • Viewing Zone

  13. ICP Plasma Torches End-on Viewing • Must remove “tail flame” • Ground state atoms • Molecular species • Larger injector diameters – longer residence time • Significant chemical interferences • Significant sensitivity improvement – up to 10x

  14. ICP Plasma Torches • Outside: 16 – 18 mm • Inner – Outer Gap: 0.5 – 1.0 mm • Injector: 1.0 – 4.0 mm • 1.0 mm for volatile solvents • 2.0 mm general purpose radial torch • 2.4 mm general purpose axial torch • Demountable Injectors • Ceramic (alumina) or sapphire for HF • Flexibility • Complexity • Cost

  15. ICP Spray Chambers Aerosol Conditioning • Remove droplets larger than 20 um • Gravitational settling • Inertial impaction • Evaporation • Recombination • Reduce aerosol concentration • Modify aerosol phase equilibria • Modify aerosol charge equilibria • Reduce turbulence of nebulization

  16. ICP Spray Chambers Particle Motion in a Spray Chamber

  17. ICP Spray Chambers Scott Double-Pass • Large volume (> 100 mL) • Large surface area • Phase equilibria • Stagnant areas • Long stabilization time • Long washout • Drainage

  18. ICP Spray Chambers Cyclonic with Baffle • Moderate volume: 50 mL • Moderate surface area • Entire volume swept by carrier flow • Fast equilibration • Fast washout • Sensitivity enhanced by 1.2 – 1.5x • Now most common type

  19. ICP Spray Chambers • Desolvation begins in the spray chamber • Extent affects droplet size • Affects amount transported to the plasma • Maintain constant temperature • Liquid on the walls must equilibrate with vapor • Minimize surface area • Drain away excess quickly

  20. ICP Spray Chambers • Speciation begins in the spray chamber • Volatile species in gas phase are more efficiently transported than droplets • Nebulization does not control the rate of sample introduction • Cool spray chamber (especially for organic solvents) • Minimize surface area

  21. Pneumatic Self-aspirating Concentric Cross-flow Non-aspirating Babington V-groove GEM Cone MiraMist Grid Fritted Other Ultrasonic nebulizer Thermospray Spark ablation Laser ablation Specialty HEN, MCN, MicroMist DIHEN, DIN Nebulizers

  22. 1.5 0.45 0.5 3 ù h é ù é 10 Q é ù 585 s l d + 597 = ê ú ê ú ê ú 3,2 ë û V r Q 0.5 ë û ( sr ) ë û g Mean Droplet Size NUKIYAMA AND TANASAWA EQUATION d3,2 = Sauter mean diameter - (m) V = Velocity difference of gas-liquid - (m/s)  = Surface tension - (dyn/cm)  = Liquid density - (g/cm3)  = Liquid viscosity - (Poise or dyn·s/cm2) Ql = Volume flowrate, liquid - (cm3/s) Qg = Volume flowrate, gas - (cm3/s) S. Nukiyama and Y. Tanasawa, Trans. Soc. Mech. Eng., Tokyo, 1938-40, Vol. 4 – 6, Reports 1 – 6.

  23. Self-Aspirating Nebulizers • Concentric • Gouy design (1897) • Efficiency approaching 3% • Glass • Quartz • Teflon • Cross-flow • Efficiency approaching 2.5% • Glass • Sapphire

  24. Self-Aspirating Nebulizers Glass Concentric

  25. Self-Aspirating Nebulizers Glass Concentric

  26. Self-Aspirating Nebulizers

  27. Self-Aspirating Nebulizers

  28. Self-Aspirating Nebulizers Cross-flow

  29. Non-aspirating Nebulizers • Original Babington Design (1973) • Very inefficient • Could nebulize “anything” • V-groove (Suddendorf, 1978) • Much improved efficiency, > 1% • Best choice for analysis of slurries • Best choice for analysis of used oils • Grid (Hildebrand, 1986) • Efficiency approaching 4.5% • Very difficult to maintain

  30. Non-aspirating Nebulizers V-groove (Babington)

  31. Non-aspirating Nebulizers • GEM Cone (PerkinElmer) • Efficiency ~ 1.2% • MiraMist/Parallel-Path (Burgener) • Efficiency approaching 3 %

  32. Non-aspirating Nebulizers • MiraMist Parallel-Path

  33. Non-aspirating Nebulizers Ultrasonic Nebulizer • Efficiency approaches 30% • Sensitivity improves ~10x • Droplet size < 5 m • Potentially heavy solvent load • Desolvation essential Membrane separator available • Desolvation interferences occur (eg., As III vs. As IV) • Does not handle high solids well

  34. Sample Introduction Accessories Desolvation: Apex Q from Elemental Scientific • Sensitivity improves ~10x • Uses concentric nebulizer and cyclonic spray chamber • Desolvation interferences • High solids problematic • Available in HF-resistant version

  35. Sample Introduction Accessories Spray Chamber Cooling: PC3 from Elemental Scientific • Sensitivity improves • Reduces solvent loading • Reduces oxide interferences in ICPMS • Uses concentric nebulizer and cyclonic spray chamber • Available in HF-resistant version

  36. Sample Introduction Accessories • Fit Kits couple liquid and gas supplies to the nebulizer • Especially useful for high pressure nebulizers

  37. The MEINHARD®Nebulizer Type A • Lapped ends – capillary and nozzle flush • Simple, monolithic design Type C • Recessed capillary for higher TDS tolerance • Vitreous, fire-polished ends • Stronger suction Type K • Recessed capillary • Lapped ends • Lower Ar flow: 0.7 L/min

  38. The MEINHARD®Nebulizer Intensity, 40 ppb Precision, 40 ppb BEC DL

  39. The MEINHARD®Nebulizer Type A • Lapped ends – capillary and nozzle flush • Simple, monolithic design Type C • Recessed capillary for higher TDS tolerance • Vitreous, fire-polished ends • Stronger suction Type K • Recessed capillary • Lapped ends • Lower Ar flow: 0.7 L/min

  40. Glass Concentric Nebulizer • Advantages • Simple, single piece desgin • All glass design, inert • Permanently aligned - self aligning • Easy to use • Disadvantages • Low efficiency ( ~3%) • Glass attacked by HF • High or undissolved solids may clog capillary

  41. HF-Resistant Nebulizers • Concentric nebulizers in Teflon PFA and Polypropylene from Elemental Scientific • Typical flows: 50 – 700 L/min; 1 L/min • Integral or demountable solution tubing • Efficiency: 2 – 3% MicroFLOW PFA PolyPro

  42. HF-Resistant Kits Complete Kits include: • Demountable Torch • Pt or Sapphire Injector • Adapter • Teflon PFA Spray Chamber • Teflon PFA or Polypropylene Nebulizer

  43. Nebulizers

  44. Nebulizers

  45. 1.5 0.45 0.5 3 ù h é ù é 10 Q é ù 585 s l d + 597 = ê ú ê ú ê ú 3,2 ë û V r Q 0.5 ë û ( sr ) ë û g Mean Droplet Size NUKIYAMA AND TANASAWA EQUATION d3,2 = Sauter mean diameter - (m) V = Velocity difference of gas-liquid - (m/s) Ql = Volume flowrate, liquid - (cm3/s) Qg = Volume flowrate, gas - (cm3/s) • Adjust annulus to increase V, but maintain Qg • Adjust capillary to decrease Ql

  46. High Efficiency Nebulizer Type A HEN

  47. High Efficiency Nebulizer

  48. High Efficiency Nebulizer PN: TR-30-A3 MicroConcentric Nebulizer (Cetac) MicroMist (Glass Expansion)

  49. High Efficiency Nebulizer • The HEN normally aspirates 30 – 300 L/min • Design gas flow is 1 L/min of argon • Normal operating pressure is 170 psi, 150 and 90 psi versions are available.

  50. High Efficiency Nebulizer • Under normal operating conditions, a HEN exhibits a D3,2 of 1.2 – 1.5 m • “Starved” TR-30-A3 exhibits D3,2 of 3.2 – 4.2 m • Normal operating conditions for a TR-30-A3 yield a mean droplet size of about 15 m

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