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The choice of concentrations to make will depend on the samples and the concentration of analyte within the samples that are being analyzed. For first time users it is wise to make a calibration curve with a large range to encompass all the possible outcomes. When the user is more aware of the kind of concentrations that they are producing in their synthesis then they can narrow down the range to fit the kind of concentrations that they are anticipating.

In this example we will make concentrations ranging from 10 ppm to 0.1 ppm, with a total of five samples. In a typical ICP-AES analysis about 3 mL of solution is used, however if you have situations with substantial wavelength overlap then you may have chosen to do two separate runs and so you will need approximately 6 mL solution. In general it is wise to have at least 10 mL of solution to prepare for any eventuality that may occur. There will also be some extra amount needed for samples that are being used for the quality control check. For this reason 10 mL should be a sufficient amount to prepare of each concentration.

We can define the unknowns in the equation as follows:

  • C I = concentration of concentrated solution (ppm)
  • C F = desired concentration (ppm)
  • M I = initial mass of material (mL)
  • M F = mass of material required for dilution (mL)

The methodology adopted works as follows. Make the high concentration solution then take from that solution and dilute further to the desired concentrations that are required.

Let's say the concentration of the stock solution from the supplier is 100 ppm of analyte. First we should dilute to a concentration of 10 ppm. To make 10 mL of 10 ppm solution we should take 1 mL of the 100 ppm solution and dilute it up to 10 mL with nanopure water, now the concentration of this solution is 10 ppm. Then we can take from the 10 ppm solution and dilute this down to get a solution with 5 ppm. To do this take 5 mL of the 10 ppm solution and dilute it to 10 mL with nanopure water, then you will have a solution of 10 mL that is 5 ppm concentration. And so you can do this successively taking aliquots from each solution working your way down at incremental steps until you have a series of solutions that have concentrations ranging from 10 ppm all the way down to 0.1 ppm or lower, as required.

Icp-aes at work

While ICP-AES is a useful method for quantifying the presence of a single metal in a given nanoparticle, another very important application comes from the ability to determine the ratio of metals within a sample of nanoparticles.

In the following examples we can consider the bi-metallic nanoparticles of iron with copper. In a typical synthesis 0.75 mmol of Fe(acac) 3 is used to prepare iron-oxide nanoparticle of the form Fe 3 O 4 . It is possible to replace a quantity of the Fe n+ ions with another metal of similar charge. In this manner bi-metallic particles were made with a precursor containing a suitable metal. In this example the additional metal precursor will be Cu(acac) 2 .

Keep the total metal concentration in this example is 0.75 mmol. So if we want to see the effect of having 10% of the metal in the reaction as copper, then we will use 10% of 0.75 mmol, that is 0.075 mmol Cu(acac) 2 , and the corresponding amount of iron is 0.675 mmol Fe(acac) 3 . We can do this for successive increments of the metals until you make 100% copper oxide particles.

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Source:  OpenStax, Nanomaterials and nanotechnology. OpenStax CNX. May 07, 2014 Download for free at http://legacy.cnx.org/content/col10700/1.13
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