Abstract

Influence of laser wavelength, laser irradiance and the buffer gas pressure were studied in high irradiance laser ablation and ionization source coupled with an orthogonal time-of-flight mass spectrometer. Collisional cooling effects of energetic plasma ions were proved to vary significantly with the elemental mass number. Effective dissociation of interferential polyatomic ions in the ion source, resulting from collision and from high laser irradiance, was verified. Investigation of relative sensitivity coefficients (RSC) of different elements performed on a steel standard GBW01396, which was ablated at 1064 nm, 532 nm, 355 nm, and 266 nm, has demonstrated that the thermal ablation mechanism could play a critical role with the first three wavelengths, while 266 nm induces non-thermal ablation principally. Experimental results also indicated that there is no evident discrepancy for most metal elements on RSCs and LODs among four wavelengths at high irradiance, except that high boiling point elements like Nb, Mo, and W have higher RSCs at higher irradiance regions of 1064 nm, 532 nm, and 355 nm due to thermal ablation. A geological standard and a garnet stone were also used in the experiment subsequently, and their RSCs and LODs for metal elements show nonsignificant dependence on wavelength at designated irradiances. All results reveal that relatively uniform sensitivity can be achieved at any wavelength for metal elements in the solids used in our experiments at an appropriate irradiance for the low pressure high irradiance laser ablation and ionization source.

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