JoVE Logo

Sign In

14.17 : Flame Photometry: Lab

In a flame photometer, when a solution like potassium chloride is aspirated into the flame, the solvent evaporates, leaving behind dehydrated salt. This salt dissociates into free gaseous atoms in their ground state. Some of these atoms absorb energy from the flame, leading to their excitation. The excited atoms return to the ground state, emitting photons at characteristic wavelengths. Because only electronic transitions are involved, the resulting emission lines are very narrow. The intensity of the emitted radiation is linearly proportional to the concentration of the analyte in the solution being aspirated. Still, this linearity is observed mainly at the low end of the calibration curve. At higher analyte concentrations, more atoms in the ground state, which can reabsorb the emitted radiation, deviates from the linear relationship.

Modern flame photometers can automatically process multianalyte multipoint calibration data and perform measurements without the need for sample dilution, accommodating concentrations up to 1000 mg/L. While flame photometry is primarily used for the determination of sodium (Na), potassium (K), and lithium (Li) in clinical laboratories, it finds niche applications in various fields. For example, it measures residual alkali metals in biodiesel and determines sodium, potassium, and calcium in cement. In the past, flame emission spectrometry enabled the measurement of up to 60 elements in hot nitrous oxide, acetylene flames. However, today, atomic absorption spectrometry, or AAS, is predominantly used for measuring metals other than alkali metals.

Tags

Flame PhotometryFlame PhotometerPotassium ChlorideExcitationEmitted RadiationAnalyte ConcentrationMultianalyte CalibrationSodium DeterminationPotassium MeasurementLithium AnalysisAtomic Absorption SpectrometryAlkali MetalsEmission Lines

From Chapter 14:

article

Now Playing

14.17 : Flame Photometry: Lab

Atomic Spectroscopy

204 Views

article

14.1 : Atomic Spectroscopy: Absorption, Emission, and Fluorescence

Atomic Spectroscopy

731 Views

article

14.2 : Atomic Spectroscopy: Effects of Temperature

Atomic Spectroscopy

267 Views

article

14.3 : Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy: Overview

Atomic Spectroscopy

861 Views

article

14.4 : Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy: Instrumentation

Atomic Spectroscopy

500 Views

article

14.5 : Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy: Radiation and Light Sources

Atomic Spectroscopy

309 Views

article

14.6 : Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy: Atomization Methods

Atomic Spectroscopy

341 Views

article

14.7 : Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy: Interference

Atomic Spectroscopy

589 Views

article

14.8 : Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy: Lab

Atomic Spectroscopy

294 Views

article

14.9 : Atomic Emission Spectroscopy: Overview

Atomic Spectroscopy

940 Views

article

14.10 : Atomic Emission Spectroscopy: Instrumentation

Atomic Spectroscopy

310 Views

article

14.11 : Atomic Emission Spectroscopy: Interference

Atomic Spectroscopy

144 Views

article

14.12 : Inductively Coupled Plasma Atomic Emission Spectroscopy: Principle

Atomic Spectroscopy

471 Views

article

14.13 : Inductively Coupled Plasma Atomic Emission Spectroscopy: Instrumentation

Atomic Spectroscopy

171 Views

article

14.14 : Atomic Emission Spectroscopy: Lab

Atomic Spectroscopy

136 Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved