Femtosecond laser ablation molecular isotopic spectrometry for zirconium isotope analysis.

Anal Chem

†Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720, United States.

Published: May 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the use of laser ablation molecular isotopic spectrometry (LAMIS) for quick isotopic analysis of zirconium using a femtosecond-laser system with specific operating conditions.
  • Researchers observed six zirconium oxide molecular bands with identifiable isotopic shifts and confirmed their theoretical predictions through experiments using a (94)Zr-enriched sample.
  • The findings indicate that Zr isotope analysis can be accurately performed without labeled calibration standards, with potential improvements to analytical accuracy through comprehensive molecular constants.

Article Abstract

Laser ablation molecular isotopic spectrometry (LAMIS) for rapid isotopic analysis of zirconium at atmospheric pressure was studied with a femtosecond-laser system operated under high repetition rate (1 kHz) and low pulse energy (160 μJ). The temporal evolution of zirconium neutral-atomic and ionic lines, as well as zirconium oxide molecular bands, were studied. Six molecular bands, belonging to the d(3)Δ-a(3)Δ (i.e., the α system) and E(1)Σ(+)-X(1)Σ(+) transitions, were observed with appreciable isotopic shifts. The assignments of the isotopic bandheads were first based on theoretical predictions of the band origins and the associated isotopic shifts of various dipole-allowed ZrO electronic transitions, followed by an experimental confirmation with a (94)Zr-enriched ZrO2 sample. In this work, the α(0,1) band from the d(3)Δ3-a(3)Δ3 subsystem was utilized for Zr isotope analysis based on a compromise between the magnitude of isotopic shifts in emission wavelengths, emission strengths, signal-to-background ratios, and spectral interferences. The analysis was performed in a standardless calibration approach; the isotopic information was extracted from the experimentally measured molecular spectra through theoretical spectral fitting. The results demonstrate the feasibility to obtain isotopic information for a spectrally complicated element like zirconium, without the need to use isotopically labeled calibration standards. The availability of comprehensive molecular constants will further improve the analytical accuracy of this standardless calibration approach.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.5b00056DOI Listing

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