Issue 4, 2004

Comparative study of laser induced plasma spectroscopy and spark-optical emission spectroscopy for quantitative analysis of aluminium alloys

Abstract

Electrical spark-optical emission spectroscopy (OES) has been used for over 50 years for the direct analysis of alloys in the aluminium industry. This method has undergone continual improvement over time, but conventional OES can barely reach the new specification limits required for some critical aluminium alloys. As part of a continuous improvement process, instrument manufacturers, academic and industrial researchers are now showing a particular interest for laser induced plasma spectroscopy (LIPS) as an alternate and/or complementary approach for the analysis of aluminium alloys. In this work, by using the same optical mounting (i.e. same spectrometer model with the same spectral lines), we have directly compared the analytical performances of these two sources. By comparing the calculated concentrations obtained with these two sources using the same samples and the same standards, we show that in general the two sources give comparable quantitative results for major, minor and trace elements. The precision obtained with LIPS is improved by a factor of two when compared to traditional spark-OES. The results obtained in this work establish LIPS as a potential method for the quantitative analysis of aluminium alloys in industry.

Article information

Article type
Technical Note
Submitted
02 Dec 2003
Accepted
12 Feb 2004
First published
02 Mar 2004

J. Anal. At. Spectrom., 2004,19, 499-501

Comparative study of laser induced plasma spectroscopy and spark-optical emission spectroscopy for quantitative analysis of aluminium alloys

F. R. Doucet, T. F. Belliveau, J. Fortier and J. Hubert, J. Anal. At. Spectrom., 2004, 19, 499 DOI: 10.1039/B315619B

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