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Flame Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy (Method Development ePrimer)

Guides | 2021 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
AAS
Industries
Environmental, Food & Agriculture, Energy & Chemicals
Manufacturer
Agilent Technologies

Summary

Significance of Flame Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy


This primer highlights the importance of flame atomic absorption (AA) spectrometry as a robust, cost-effective method for trace and minor element analysis across environmental, industrial, food, materials and metallurgical applications. Flame AA offers high sensitivity for many elements, fast throughput with modern fast-sequential and precision-optimized modes, and flexible sample introduction for aqueous, organic and vapor-generating media.

Study Objectives and Overview


Agilent’s Flame AA ePrimer documents standardized operating conditions, instrument configurations and method development strategies for over 70 elements. It aims to guide users through:
  • Selection of optimum lamp currents, flame types and background correction methods
  • Fast sequential measurement and PROMT precision-optimized timing
  • Use of autosamplers, solvent extraction and vapor generation accessories
  • Element-specific interferences, releasing agents and calibration approaches
  • Typical applications spanning environmental monitoring, food/agriculture, chemicals, industrial processes, minerals, metallurgy and petroleum

Methodology and Instrumentation


Key instrument features and accessories:
  • Agilent Flame AA systems (55B, 240 AA, 240FS, 280FS) offering stand-alone and PC control, fast sequential (4–8 lamp) operation and PROMT precision control
  • SIPS single/double peristaltic pump for automated matrix matching, dilution, standard and modifier addition
  • SPS-4 autosampler for high-throughput liquid sampling
  • VGA-77 vapor generation accessory for cold-vapor Hg and hydride-forming elements
  • Wide range of certified lamps, combustibles, nebulizers, spray chambers and consumables

Standard operating parameters are provided for each element: lamp current, fuel/support gas, flame stoichiometry, wavelength, slit width, working concentration range, interferences and corrective measures.

Main Results and Discussion


The primer compiles optimized conditions for 70+ elements, covering:
  • Direct flame AA for alkali, alkaline earth, transition and noble metals
  • Indirect methods via heteropoly-acid solvent extraction for Cl, PO₄ and SO₄
  • Vapor generation techniques for ultra-trace As, Se, Hg
  • Use of nitrous oxide/acetylene versus air/acetylene flames to overcome matrix interferences and ionization
  • Employing releasing agents (e.g. La, K, Sr, U) or complexing modifiers (EDTA, NH₄F, borates) to suppress chemical interferences
  • Standard-addition and composite standard strategies for complex matrices such as alloys, oils, slags and ores

Instrument productivity is enhanced by fast sequential acquisition—measuring 10 elements in under two minutes with <10 mL sample consumption—and by PROMT mode which tailors read times for different concentration levels.

Benefits and Practical Applications


Agilent Flame AA methods deliver:
  • Fast, reliable multi-element analysis at ppb–ppm levels
  • Low operating costs via reduced gas and sample consumption
  • Automated workflows with SIPS and autosamplers for QA/QC and routine assays
  • Adaptability to aqueous, organic, solid digests and vapor generation for environmental, food, petrochemical and metallurgical samples
  • Comprehensive interference control ensuring accurate results in complex matrices

Future Trends and Potential Uses


Developments likely to shape flame AA include:
  • Increased integration with hyphenated sample-preparation modules for on-line extraction and mixing
  • Advanced software algorithms for automated interference correction and quality flagging
  • Eco-friendly gas mixtures and micro-flame technologies for ultra-low reagent usage
  • Enhanced miniaturization and field-deployable systems for in-situ environmental and industrial monitoring
  • Expanded use of combinatorial standard approaches and machine-learning-driven calibrations

Conclusion


Agilent’s Flame AA Method Development ePrimer provides a comprehensive, practical reference for analytical chemists seeking to optimize flame AA methods. By combining instrument innovations with interference control strategies and robust workflows, laboratories can achieve high-precision, cost-effective multi-element analysis across diverse sectors.

Used Instrumentation


  • Agilent 55B, 240, 240FS and 280FS Flame AA Spectrometers
  • SIPS 10/20 Sample Introduction Pumping Systems
  • SPS-4 Autosampler
  • VGA-77 Vapor Generation Accessory for Hg and hydride elements
  • Single-element and multi-element hollow-cathode lamps, UltrAA lamps, accessories and consumables

Reference


Masayuki Kashiki et al., Analytica Chimica Acta 53, 95–100 (1971)
Agilent Technologies, Flame Atomic Absorption Spectrometry Method Development ePrimer, January 2021

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