Atomic Absorption and Emission Spectroscopy
Atomic spectroscopy determines elemental concentrations by atomizing a sample and measuring the absorption or emission of light by free gaseous atoms.
Definition
Atomic absorption and emission spectroscopy are spectrochemical methods that quantify individual elements from the characteristic line absorption or emission of free atoms generated in a flame, furnace, or plasma.
Scope
This topic covers the principal techniques of elemental analysis: flame and graphite-furnace atomic absorption, flame and plasma atomic emission including inductively coupled plasma optical emission, and atomic fluorescence. It addresses atomization sources, line sources such as hollow-cathode lamps, background-correction strategies, and the spectral and chemical interferences characteristic of atomic methods.
Core questions
- How does an atomizer convert a sample into free gaseous atoms for measurement?
- When is absorption preferable to emission, and how does temperature shift atom populations?
- What spectral, chemical, and ionization interferences arise and how are they corrected?
- How do detection limits compare across flame, furnace, and plasma sources?
Key theories
- Boltzmann population of atomic states
- The ratio of atoms in excited to ground states follows the Boltzmann distribution and rises steeply with temperature; because most atoms remain in the ground state at flame temperatures, absorption methods are often more sensitive than emission for many elements, while hotter plasmas favour emission.
Mechanisms
A liquid sample is nebulized and atomized in a flame, an electrically heated graphite furnace, or an argon plasma, producing a population of free atoms. In absorption, light from an element-specific source passes through the atom cloud and the attenuation at a resonance line measures concentration. In emission, thermally or electrically excited atoms relax and emit at characteristic lines whose intensity scales with concentration. Calibration against standards, with background correction, converts the signal to an element concentration.
Clinical relevance
Atomic spectroscopy is central to trace-metal determination in environmental monitoring, drinking-water compliance, food and clinical samples, geological and metallurgical analysis, and lead and other toxic-element screening.
History
Atomic emission analysis dates to Bunsen and Kirchhoff's mid-19th-century spectral studies. Alan Walsh's 1955 proposal of atomic absorption spectrometry made elemental analysis routine, and Boris L'vov's graphite furnace greatly improved sensitivity. The inductively coupled plasma, developed in the 1960s–1970s, enabled simultaneous multi-element determination.
Key figures
- Alan Walsh
- Boris L'vov
- Robert Bunsen
- Gustav Kirchhoff
Related topics
Seminal works
- walsh1955
- skoog2017
- ingle1988
Frequently asked questions
- Why does atomic absorption often have lower detection limits than flame emission?
- At typical flame temperatures most atoms stay in the ground state, so there are many more atoms available to absorb than to emit, giving absorption a sensitivity advantage for elements that are hard to excite.
- What advantage does inductively coupled plasma offer over a flame?
- The plasma reaches much higher temperatures, atomizes and excites refractory elements efficiently, reduces chemical interferences, and lets many elements be measured simultaneously across a wide concentration range.