In
analytical chemistry, Atomic absorption spectroscopy is a technique for determining the concentration of a particular metal
element in a sample. Atomic absorption spectroscopy can be used to analyse the concentration of over 62 different metals in a solution.Although atomic absorption spectroscopy dates to the nineteenth century, the modern form was largely developed during the 1950s by a team of Australian chemists. They were led by
Alan Walsh and worked at the
CSIRO (Commonwealth Science and Industry Research Organisation) Division of Chemical Physics in Melbourne, Australia. The technique typically makes use of a flame to atomize the sample, but other atomizers such as a graphite furnace are also used. Three steps are involved in turning a liquid sample into an atomic gas:Desolvation – the liquid
solvent is
evaporated, and the dry sample remainsVaporisation – the solid sample vaporises to a gasVolatilisation – the compounds making up the sample are broken into free
atoms.
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