Introduction & Objectives (Exp 4)
Introduction & Objectives (Exp 4)
A solution containing the analyte is injected into a flame in AAS. The flame turns
samples into excitable free ground state atoms. A lamp generating light with a wavelength
specific to the atoms is passed through the flame, and the electrons in the atoms are activated
when the light energy is absorbed.
The Beer Lambert law outlines the link between element concentration and light
absorption. The amount of light absorbed is proportional to the number of atoms in the flame
that have been stimulated from their ground state, according to the law. (Atomic Absorption
Spectroscopy, How Does AAS Work, AAS FAQs. Agilent, 2021)
The Beer Lambert Law defines the relationship between the concentration and
absorption of an absorbing species.
A= bc
Where:
A: is the absorbance (Abs). Abs is measured by the AAS.
: is the wavelength at which absorption is observed for the element of interest?
b: is the pathlength. For flame AAS, this is typically the path length through the flame
(along the burner) and is fixed for all measurements.
c: is the determined concentration of the element.
The main goal of this experiment is to use Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy (AAS) to
determine the amount of copper (Cu). The experiment begin with preparing the 100 ppm of
copper (Cu) standard dilution with the addition of 1% (v/v) of concentrated nitric acid (1% =
1 ml). Then, a serial dilution of 0.5 ppm, 1.0 ppm, 1.5 ppm, 2.0 ppm, 2.5 ppm and 4.0 ppm
(Cu) standard solution was prepared. The prepared samples will be put through the AAS for
reading. The readings will show the amount of Fe present in each of the sample prepared.
Calibration curve will be obtained by the readings which show the relationship between the
Absorbance (Abs) and the Concentration (ppm).
OBJECTIVES