Abstract
The behaviour of a single-bore high-pressure pneumatic nebulizer (SBHPPN) with alcohols in (ICP-AES) was investigated. A standard Meinhard nebulizer was used for comparison. To this end, the drop size distribution of the primary aerosols, the analyte and solvent transport rates, Wtot and Stot, the fraction of solvent transported in liquid and vapour forms, Sliq and Svap, the excitation temperature of the plasma, Texc, and the molecular emission intensity of the C2 band were determined for solvents of different physical properties. The effect of the physical properties of the solvent on the nebulization process was also studied.The results show that the SBHPPN gives rise, for all the solvents studied, to primary aerosols that have smaller mean diameters than those produced by the Meinhard nebulizer for the same gas and liquid flows. The relative decrease in volume median diameter (Dv,50) when switching from the Meinhard nebulizer to the SBHPPN is more noticeable for alcohols than for water. Wtot is significantly higher for the SBHPPN than for the Meinhard nebulizer, particularly at high liquid flows. However, the differences between their Stot values are less pronounced. Under similar conditions, the SBHPPN gives rise, for all the solvents studied, to higher emission intensities than the Meinhard nebulizer. However, the relative signal enhancements achieved by changing from the SBHPPN to the Meinhard nebulizer are lower than the corresponding analyte transport enhancements. The relative signal enhancements achieved by switching from water to alcohols are lower for the SBHPPN than for the Meinhard nebulizer. This behaviour can be explained in terms of the higher Stot values associated with the SBHPPN, which lower Texc in comparison with the Meinhard nebulizer.
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