Encyclopedia of Environmental Science and Engineering, Volume I and II

(Ben Green) #1

550 INSTRUMENTATION: WATER AND WASTEWATER ANALYSIS


The types of instruments can be characterized by some
simple diagrams regardless of wavelength range as given in
Figure 4. The basic difference between absorption and emis-
sion spectroscopy is the use of a transmitted emr energy
source in the former, while in the latter, the sample is stimu-
lated in a thermal or electrical energy source to emit radiation.
Photoluminescence (fluorescence and phosphorescence),
stimulated by emr, is observed usually perpendicular to the
stimulating beam. In nephelometry instrumentation similar
to photoluminescence is utilized; turbidimetry can employ
absorption instrumentation.
A brief description of the basic parts of the instruments
using these phenomena follows.

(1) Energy sources
As noted from the diagrams above, all but emission
instrumentation use energy sources that irradiate the sample.

In Figure 3 the sources are indicated as a function of the
wavelength range of their radiant emissions. Various lamps,
i.e., argon, xenon, H 2 (hydrogen) and D 2 (deuterium), and
solid state radiators give continuous emissions, i.e., a range
of contiguous wavelengths and are used in molecular spec-
troscopic instrumentation. Photoluminescence and nephelo-
metric instruments use these sources.
For atomic absorption instruments hollow cathode
lamps are utilized. They are line (discontinuous) sources
providing unique radiation with a narrow bandwidth char-
acteristic of particular element. An individual lamp is usu-
ally employed for each element. Some multielement lamps
are available.
X-ray sources include x-ray tubes or radioactive sources.
The x-ray tube consists of a tungsten cathode that emits elec-
trons when heated. The electrons accelerated by a large poten-
tial strike the metal anode generating x-rays characteristic of

(a) Sources

Continuous

Wavelength, nm

Discontinuous

Spectral region

100 200 400 700 1000 2000 4000 7000 10,000 70,000 40,000
VAC UV UV VISIBLE IR
Argon
lamp

(b) Wavelength
selectors

Continuous

Discontinuous

fluorite
prism

(c) Materials for
cells, windows,
& lenses

(d) Transducers
Photon
detectors

Heat
detectors Pyroelectric cell (capacitance)

Golay pneumatic cell

Thermocouple (volts) or Bolometer (ohms)

Photoconductor

Silicon diode

Tungsten lamp
Nernst glower (ZrO 2 + Y 2 O 3
Nichrome wire (Ni + Cr)
Globar (SiC)
Hollow cathode
lamps

Photomultiplier
Phototube
Photocell

TIBr - TII

KBr

NaCl

Silicate glass

Corex glass

Fused silica or quartz

LiF

filters

Glass absorption

Interference filters

Interference wedgers

Gratings with various number of lines/mm 50 lines/mm

KBr prism

NaCl prism

Fused silica or quartz prism

xanon lamp

3000 lines/mm

Glass prism

NEAR IR FAR IR

H 2 or O 2
lamp

FIGURE 3 Components and materials for optical spectroscopic instruments. (Courtesy
of Prof. A. R. Armstrong, College of William and Mary.)

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