The Determination of Sodium, Calcium and Silicon in Pure Water by Graphite Furnace AA
Applications | 2010 | Agilent TechnologiesInstrumentation
In semiconductor manufacturing, trace metal contaminants in ultrapure rinse water can lead to electrical shorts and reduced device yield. Continuous monitoring of sodium, calcium and silicon at sub-ng/mL levels is critical for maintaining process integrity and product reliability.
This application note applies graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy (GFAAS) to quantify sodium, calcium and silicon in ultrapure water. The study aims to establish sensitive calibration procedures, determine detection limits under standard protocols (IUPAC and DIN 38 402), and evaluate reproducibility, including the effect of multiple injections.
Instrumentation:
Calibration for sodium and calcium was linear (r>0.996) with RSDs below 9%. Silicon required a second-order polynomial fit due to non-linearity. IUPAC detection limits were 0.06 ng/mL (Na), 0.13 ng/mL (Ca) and 2.1 ng/mL (Si). DIN 38 402 limits for Na and Ca were 0.05 ng/mL and 0.20 ng/mL, respectively. Multiple injections enhanced signal proportionally, suggesting a 10–20× improvement in detection capability.
The described GFAAS method delivers high sensitivity and reproducibility for ultratrace analysis in ultrapure water. Automated sampling and multiple injection features support routine QA/QC in semiconductor fabs, reducing manual handling and increasing throughput.
Future developments may focus on automated multi-element furnace sequences, tighter integration with inline process control, and further sensitivity gains via advanced chemical modifiers or laser-based atomization. Extending the approach to additional critical metals (e.g., iron) will broaden its utility in high-purity applications.
A robust GFAAS protocol has been validated for measuring sodium, calcium and silicon in ultrapure rinse water at sub-ng/mL levels. Optimized furnace programs, chemical modification and multiple injection strategies achieve the precision and detection limits required for semiconductor process monitoring.
AAS
IndustriesEnvironmental
ManufacturerAgilent Technologies
Summary
Importance of the Topic
In semiconductor manufacturing, trace metal contaminants in ultrapure rinse water can lead to electrical shorts and reduced device yield. Continuous monitoring of sodium, calcium and silicon at sub-ng/mL levels is critical for maintaining process integrity and product reliability.
Objectives and Study Overview
This application note applies graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy (GFAAS) to quantify sodium, calcium and silicon in ultrapure water. The study aims to establish sensitive calibration procedures, determine detection limits under standard protocols (IUPAC and DIN 38 402), and evaluate reproducibility, including the effect of multiple injections.
Methodology and Instrumentation
Instrumentation:
- Atomic absorption spectrometer: Agilent SpectrAA-30A
- Graphite furnace atomizer: GTA-96 with PSD-96 programmable sampler
- Hollow cathode lamps for Na, Ca, Si
- Argon (99.999%) as purge gas
- Ultrapure water system: ion-exchange filter (Servo Mischbettfilter) and Nanopure Reinstwasseranlage D-1797
Results and Discussion
Calibration for sodium and calcium was linear (r>0.996) with RSDs below 9%. Silicon required a second-order polynomial fit due to non-linearity. IUPAC detection limits were 0.06 ng/mL (Na), 0.13 ng/mL (Ca) and 2.1 ng/mL (Si). DIN 38 402 limits for Na and Ca were 0.05 ng/mL and 0.20 ng/mL, respectively. Multiple injections enhanced signal proportionally, suggesting a 10–20× improvement in detection capability.
Benefits and Practical Applications
The described GFAAS method delivers high sensitivity and reproducibility for ultratrace analysis in ultrapure water. Automated sampling and multiple injection features support routine QA/QC in semiconductor fabs, reducing manual handling and increasing throughput.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Future developments may focus on automated multi-element furnace sequences, tighter integration with inline process control, and further sensitivity gains via advanced chemical modifiers or laser-based atomization. Extending the approach to additional critical metals (e.g., iron) will broaden its utility in high-purity applications.
Conclusion
A robust GFAAS protocol has been validated for measuring sodium, calcium and silicon in ultrapure rinse water at sub-ng/mL levels. Optimized furnace programs, chemical modification and multiple injection strategies achieve the precision and detection limits required for semiconductor process monitoring.
Reference
- K. Marquardt, Marine Technology 16(4), 155–160 (1985)
- W. Frech, A. Cedergren, Anal. Chim. Acta, 113, 227–235 (1980)
- H. Kaiser, Z. Fresenius Anal. Chem., 209, 1–18 (1965)
- H. Kaiser, Z. Fresenius Anal. Chem., 216, 80–93 (1966)
- G. L. Long, J. D. Winefordner, Anal. Chem. 55, 713A–724A (1983)
- Deutsche Einheitsverfahren DIN 38 402, Part 5: Water, wastewater and sludge analysis
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
Similar PDF
Direct Determination of As, Cu and Pb in Seawater by Zeeman Graphite Furnace Atomic Absorption Spectrometry
2010|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Direct Determination of As, Cu and Pb in Seawater by Zeeman Graphite Furnace Atomic Absorption Spectrometry Application Note Atomic Absorption Author Introduction Tran T. Nham Environmental pollution is becoming an increasingly important issue and receiving world wide attention. There is…
Key words
normal, normalseawater, seawaterinject, injectfurnace, furnaceparameters, parametersyes, yesmodifier, modifierarsenic, arseniczeeman, zeemancopper, copperatomization, atomizationrecalibration, recalibrationblank, blankdetermination, determinationcommand
Analysis of Shellfish Tissue for Cadmium, Mercury and Nickel
2010|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Analysis of Shellfish Tissue for Cadmium, Mercury and Nickel Application Note Atomic Absorption Author Introduction Jonathan H. Moffett Huge amounts of toxic effluents are being dumped either directly or indirectly into the world’s oceans. The ocean's organisms concentrate these toxic…
Key words
normal, normalshellfish, shellfishcadmium, cadmiuminject, injectmercury, mercurylamp, lampconc, concslit, slitabsorbance, absorbancesoln, solnnickel, nickelyes, yessample, samplemode, modecertif
Evaluation of Three Methods of Matrix Modifier Injection in Graphite Furnace AAS
2010|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Evaluation of Three Methods of Matrix Modifier Injection in Graphite Furnace AAS Application Note Atomic Absorption Author Introduction Deen Johnson The determination of metals by graphite furnace atomic absorption spectroscopy (GFAAS) often requires the use of a chemical matrix modifier.…
Key words
normal, normalmodifier, modifierinject, injectfurnace, furnaceyes, yespre, preinjection, injectiongraphite, graphitereslope, resloperecalibration, recalibrationmean, meanparameters, parametersspectraa, spectraadeviation, deviationwet
Determination of Platinum and Palladium in Chelated Systems by GFAAS
2010|Agilent Technologies|Applications
Determination of Platinum and Palladium in Chelated Systems by GFAAS Application Note Atomic Absorption Authors Introduction Peter Watkins With the discovery of the anti-tumour properties of cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum(II) (cisplatin) [1], intensive research has been completed which examines the role of platinum…
Key words
normal, normalautomix, automixplatinum, platinuminject, injectpalladium, palladiumreslope, resloperage, rageresult, resultyes, yesspectraa, spectraapremixed, premixedhollow, hollowrecalibration, recalibrationblank, blankcathode