TY - JOUR KW - Emission KW - Power KW - Ablation KW - Laser KW - Laser ablation KW - Laser ablation KW - Spectroscopy KW - Inductively coupled plasma (icp) KW - Inductively-coupled plasma KW - Mass KW - Plasma KW - Sampling KW - Atomic emission KW - Atomic emission spectroscopy KW - Emission spectroscopy KW - Emission spectroscopy KW - Solid sampling KW - Density KW - Removal KW - Mass removal AU - Mark A Shannon AU - Xianglei Mao AU - Alberto J Fernández AU - Wing-Tat Chan AU - Richard E Russo AB -
For laser ablation solid sampling, the quantity of material ablated (removed) influences the sensitivity of chemical analysis. The mass removal rate depends strongly on the laser power density, which is the main controllable parameter for a given material and wavelength parameter using laser solid sampling for inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP-AES). For a wide variety of materials, a decrease in the rate of change, or roll-off, in mass removed is observed with increasing incident laser power density. The roll-off results from a change in the efficiency of material removed by the laser beam, primarily due to shielding of the target from the incident laser energy by a laser-vapor plume interaction. Several analytical technologies were employed to study the quantity of mass removed versus laser power density. Data for mass ablation behavior versus laser power density are reported using ICP-AES, atomic emission from a laser-induced plasma near the sample surface, acoustic stress power in the target, and measurements of crater volumes. This research demonstrates that the change in ICP-AES intensity with laser power density is due to changes in the mass removal. The roll-off in mass ablation is not due to a change in particle size distribution of the ablated species, fractionation of the sample, or a change in transport efficiency to the ICP torch. Accurate tracking of the ICP-AES with the laser ablation process justifies the use of internal and external standardization.
BT - Analytical Chemistry C2 - LBNL-37930 DA - 12/1995 DO - 10.1021/ac00120a015 IS - 24 LA - eng LB - Laser N1 -LBNL-37930 IN FILE
N2 -For laser ablation solid sampling, the quantity of material ablated (removed) influences the sensitivity of chemical analysis. The mass removal rate depends strongly on the laser power density, which is the main controllable parameter for a given material and wavelength parameter using laser solid sampling for inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectroscopy (ICP-AES). For a wide variety of materials, a decrease in the rate of change, or roll-off, in mass removed is observed with increasing incident laser power density. The roll-off results from a change in the efficiency of material removed by the laser beam, primarily due to shielding of the target from the incident laser energy by a laser-vapor plume interaction. Several analytical technologies were employed to study the quantity of mass removed versus laser power density. Data for mass ablation behavior versus laser power density are reported using ICP-AES, atomic emission from a laser-induced plasma near the sample surface, acoustic stress power in the target, and measurements of crater volumes. This research demonstrates that the change in ICP-AES intensity with laser power density is due to changes in the mass removal. The roll-off in mass ablation is not due to a change in particle size distribution of the ablated species, fractionation of the sample, or a change in transport efficiency to the ICP torch. Accurate tracking of the ICP-AES with the laser ablation process justifies the use of internal and external standardization.
PY - 1995 SP - 4522 EP - 4529 ST - Anal. Chem. T2 - Analytical Chemistry TI - Laser Ablation Mass Removal versus Incident Power Density during Solid Sampling for Inductively Coupled Plasma Atomic Emission Spectroscopy VL - 67 ER -