首页   按字顺浏览 期刊浏览 卷期浏览 1996 winter conference on plasma spectrochemistry preliminary program
1996 winter conference on plasma spectrochemistry preliminary program

 

作者:

 

期刊: Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry  (RSC Available online 1995)
卷期: Volume 10, issue 10  

页码: 047-058

 

ISSN:0267-9477

 

年代: 1995

 

DOI:10.1039/JA995100X047

 

出版商: RSC

 

数据来源: RSC

 

摘要:

1996 Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry Preliminary Program Monday January 8,1996 800 OPENING AND WELCOME Ramon M. Barnes 8:05 PLl THE FUTURE OF MICROWAVE AND GLOW DISCHARGES FOR SPECTROCHEMICAL ANALYSES. James D. Winefordner Department of Chemistry University of Florida Gainesville FL 3261 1 1. Sample Introduction and Transport Phenomena Jose A. C. Broekaert Chairman 915 IL1 NEBULIZER CHARACTERISTICS AND AEROSOLS. Richard F. Browner School of Chemistry & Biochemistry Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta GA 30332-4000 945 IL2 NEBULIZER DIAGNOSTICS FUNDAMENTAL PARAMETERS CHALLENGES AND TOOLS. Akbar Montaser Department of Chemistry George Washington University Washington DC 20052 1015 M1 INSTALLATION AND PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS OF SIX NEBULIZERS FOR ICP-MS.Gene S. Hall Department of Chemistry; Rob Sherrell and Paul Field Marine/Coastal Science Rutgers the State University of New Jersey New Brunswick NJ 08903 DEVICES THEIR ROLES AND PERFORMANCE. J. W. H. Lam J. W. McLaren and R. E. Sturgeon National Research Council of Canada M12 B12 Ottawa ON K1K OR6 Canada 1055 M3 NOVEL SAMPLE INTRODUCTION SYSTEMS FOR HIGH RESOLUTION ICP MASS SPECTROMETRY. Henri Dillen OCAS nv Onderzoeks Centrum voor Aanwending van Staal John Kennedylaan 3 B-9060 Zelzate Belgium 11:15 M4 NEW APPLICATIONS OF MICROWAVE RADIATION TO THE SAMPLE INTRODUCTION IN ATOMIC SPECTROMETRY. Luis Gras Luis Bordera Jose Luis Todoli Juan Mora Vincente Hernandis and Antonio Canals Universidad de Alicante Facultad de Ciencias Departamento de Quimica Analitica Apartado/PO Box 99,03071 Alicante Spain 11:35 M5 CHARACTERIZATION OF A MEMBRANE DESOLVATION INTERFACE FOR TRACE ELEMENT Brenne'" J.Zhu' A. Gutierrez' A. Zander' and M. R. Plantz3 'Ginzton Research Center Varian Associates 3075 Hansen Way Palo Alto CA 94305-1025 2CETAC Technologies Inc. 5600 South 42nd Street Omaha Nebraska 68 107 3Varian Optical Spectroscopy Instruments 201 Hansen Court Suite 108 Wood Dale IL 60191; *On leave from the Geological Survey of Israel Jerusalem 130 IL3 NEW HIGH PRESSURE NEBULIZERS FOR ICP SPECTROMETRY. Harald Berndt Institut fur Spektrochemie und Angewandte Spektroskopie Postfach 10 13 52 D-44013 Dortmund Germany 2fiO M6 COMPARISON OF HIGH EFFICIENCY NEBULIZERS FOR COUPLING HPLC AND ICP-MS. Norbert Jakubowski and Dietmar Stuewer Institut fur Spektrochemie und Angewandte Spektroskopie Postfach 10 13 52 D-44013 Dortmund Germany FI/ICP-MS WITH A HIGH-EFFICIENCY NEBULIZER.Edward M. Heithmar Spiros A. Pergantis and Thomas A. Hinners US. Environmental Protection Agency National Exposure Research Laboratory Characterization Research Division PO Box 93478 Las Vegas NV 89193-3478 240 M8 DIRECT DETERMINATION OF TRACE METALS IN SOLID SAMPLES BY ELECTROTHERMAL VAPORIZATION ICP-MS (ETV-ICP-MS). Luc Moens Frank Vanhaecke Sylvie Boonen and Richard Dams Laboratory of Analytical Chemistry Ghent University Proeftuinstraat 86 B-9000 Ghent Belgium 1035 M2 MICRO-VOLUME SAMPLE INTRODUCTION DETECTION BY SOLVENT EXTRACTION AND ICP-MS. I. B. 220 M7 EFFECT OF SPRAY-CHAMBER DESIGN ON 2. Flow Injection Atomic Spectrometry Julian F.Tyson Chairman 320 IL4 ICP ATOMIC AND MASS SPECTROMETRY THE FLOW INJECTION WAY. Cameron McLeod Division of Chemistry School of Science Sheffield Hallam University Pond Street Sheffield S1 1WB,UK SALINE BRINES. Ludwik Halicz Ittai Gavrieli and Ethel Dorfman Geological Survey of Israel 30 Malkhei Yisrael St. Jerusalem 95501 Israel 3.50 M9 ON-LINE ICP-MS ANALYSES OF REE IN HIGHLY 410 M10 AUTOMATED ON-LINE PRE-CONCENTRATION SYSTEM FOR PLASMA SPECTROMETRY. Ana Paula Packer Maria Fernanda GinB Carlos E. S. Miranda and Boaventura F. dos Reis. Centro de Energia Nuclear na Agricultura (CENA/USP) C.P. 96 13.400-970. Piracicaba-SP Brazil 4:30 M11 DETERMINATION OF SPALLATION AND FISSION HPLC-ICP-MS. Kopajtic Zlatan and Rollin Stefan Paul Scherrer Institut (PSI) CH-5232 Villigen PSI Switzerland 450 M12 THE DETERMINATION OF BROMINE AND IODINE IN NATURAL WATERS AND RELATED MATERIALS BY ICP-MS AND FIAS-ICP-MS.Henry A. Foner Ludwik Halicz Olga Yoffe and Sarah Ehrlich Geological Survey of Israel 30 Malkhei Yisrael St. Jerusalem 95501 Israel 510 M13 THE ANALYSIS OF SMALL SAMPLE VOLUMES BY HIGH RESOLUTION ICP-MS. Ulrich Greb and Lothar Rottmann Finnigan MAT GmbH Barkhausenstr. 2 D-28 197 Bremen Germany 530 PD1 STATUS OF SAMPLE INTRODUCTION AND AEROSOL TRANSPORT. Akbar Montaser Chairman 630 EXHIBITION OPENING and SOCIAL HOUR PRODUCTS IN UOZ AND Tho TARGETS BY FI-ICP-MS AND Tuesday January 9,1996 3. Elemental Speciation Peter C. Uden Chairman 800 PL2 WHY SHOULD WE LOOSE INFORMATION! Olivier F. X. Donard Laboratoire de Photophysique et Photochimie Molkulaire UniversitC de Bordeaux I 33405 Talence France ELEMENT SPECIATION USING PLASMA DETECTION. Alfred0 Sanz-Medei J.M. Gonzalez M. L. Fernandez M. R. Fernandez de la Campa and J. M. Marchante Department of Physical and Analytical Chemistry University of Oviedo c/ Julian Claveria 8 33006 Oviedo Spain 945 IL6 ELEMENTAL SPECIATION IN HUMAN STUDIES THE ROLE OF HYPHENATED TECHNIQUES. Helen Crews CSL Food Science Lab Norwich Research Park Norwich NR4 7UQ UK 1&15 T1 NEW DEPARTURES FOR ELEMENTAL SPECIATION AT ULTRA-TRACE LEVELS. Joseph A. Caruso Department of Chemistry University of Cincinnati P.O. Box 210172 Cincinnati OH 1035 T2 SILICON SPECIATION USING HIGH PERFORMANCE PLASMA ATOMIC EMISSION SPECTROMETRY. Karen O'Hanlon Michael Foulkes and Les Ebdon Plymouth Analytical Chemistry Research Unit Department of Environmental Sciences University of Plymouth Plymouth Devon PL4 8AA UK la55 T3 THE SPECIATION OF ARSENIC IN REFERENCE MATERIALS BY USING MICRO-HPLC/ICP-MS.Spiros A. Pergantis Edward M. Heithmar and Thomas A. Hinners U.S. Environmental Protection Agency National Exposure Research Laboratory Characterization Research Division PO Box 93478 Las Vegas NV 89193-3478 11:15 T4 METHYLMERCURY IN WHALE LIVERS KIDNEYS AND BLUBBER AS DETERMINED BY GAS CHROMATOGRAPHY WITH ATOMIC EMISSION DETECTION (GC-AED). Mary Kate Behlke and Peter C. Uden Department of Chemistry University of Massachusetts Amherst MA 01003; Stephen A. Wise and Michele M. Schantz National Institute of Standards and Technology Analytical Chemistry Division Gaithersburg MD 20899 11:35 T5 RECENT ADVANCES IN THE SPECIATION OF SELENIUM IN PETROLEUM REFINERY AND MUNICIPAL WITH LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY.Raimund Roehl California Public Health Foundation 2151 Berkeley Way Suite 210 Berkeley CA 915 IL5 VESICLES-MEDIATED HYBRID TECHNIQUES FOR 45221-0172 LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHY-INDUCTIVELY COUPLED WASTE WATERS USING ICP-MS AND ICP-MS COUPLED 94704- 1 103 4. Elemental Speciation Joseph A. Caruso 1:lO IL7 ELEMENTAL SPECIATION. Les Ebdon University of Plymouth Department of Environmental Sciences Drake Circus Plymouth PL4 8AA UK 1996 Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry 3 January 8-1 3 19961:40 T6 SELENIUM SPECIATION BY GC/ICP-IPMS. Klaus G. Heumann and Stefan Gallus Universitat Regensburg Institut fur Anorganische Chemie 93040 Regensburg Germany POWERFUL HYPHENATED TECHNIQUE FOR THE MULTIELEMENTAL SPECIATION OF VOLATILE ORGANOMETALLIC COMPOUNDS.Eckard Jantzen GALAB Technology Center GKSS Max-Planck-Strape D-21502 Geesthacht Germany; Andreas Prange GKSS Research Center Inst. of Phys. and Chem. Analysis Max-Planck-Strape D-21502 Geesthacht Germany 220 TS GAS CHROMATOGRAPHIC DETECTION USING RADIO FREQUENCY GLOW DISCHARGE MASS SPECTROMETRY. Lisa I(. Olson Mikhail Belkin and Joseph A. Caruso Department of Chemistry P.O. Box 210172 University of Cincinnati Cincinnati OH 45221-0172 240 T9 ELEMENTAL SPECIATION USING CAPILLARY ELECTROPHORESIS INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY AND ELECTROSPRAY MASS SPECTROMETRY. John W. Olesik Jeffery A. Kinzer Eric Grunwald Kurt Thaxton and Susan Olesik Laboratory for Plasma Spectrochemistry Laser Spectroscopy and Mass Spectroscopy The Ohio State University Departments of Geological Sciences and Chemistry 125 S.Oval Mall Columbus OH 43210 200 T7 CRYOFOCUSING-GC-ICP-MS AS AN EASY AND Tuesday Poster Session Sample Introduction Flow Injection Analysis Elemental Speciation TP1 PERFORMANCE COMPARISON OF COMMERCIAL PNEUMATIC AND ULTRASONIC NEBULIZERS. Jennifer A. Winn Precision Glassblowing and Instrumentation 14775 E. Hinsdale Ave. Englewood CO 801 12 TP2 EVALUATION OF A MICROCONCENTRIC NEBULIZER FOR ICP-MS. Hans Vanhoe Mirja Van Holderbeke Luc Moens and Richard Dams Laboratory or Analytical Chemistry University of Ghent Institute for Nuclear Sciences Proeftuinstraat 86 B-9000 Ghent Belgium TP3 VOLATILE ELEMENT SPECIES IN VOLATILE ORGANIC ICP-MS.Robert I. Botto Exxon Chemical Company Baytown Chemicial Plant Laboratory Baytown TX 77520 and Abelardo Gutierrez Cetax Technologies 5600 S. 42nd St. Omaha NE 68107 TP4 TOWARDS A NEW SAMPLE INTRODUCTION DEVICE FOR PLASMA SPECTROSCOPY. Julian F. Tyson and Niel Fitzgerald Department of Chemistry University of Massachusetts Box 34510 Amherst MA 01003-4510; Lois B. Jassie CEM 3100 Smith Farm Road PO Box 200 Matthews NC 28106-0200 TP4a REDUCTION OF MEMORY EFFECTS IN ICP-MS BY A CYCLONIC SPRAY CHAMBER. Stefan Stiirup and Erik H. Larsen National Food Agency of Denmark Institute of Food Chemistry and Nutrition 19 Marrkharj Bygade DK-2860 Sarborg Denmark TP5 ANALYSIS OF CERAMICS BY INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA ATOMIC EMISSION SPECTROMETRY USING SLURRY SAMPLE INTRODUCTION TECHNIQUE IN LOW POWER AND MINI TORCH.J. H. Hyun K. M. Lee* C. H. Lim* and H. B. Lim Dankook University Department of Chemistry Young San-ku Hannam-dong Seoul Korea 140-714 *Korea Academy of Industrial Technology Material Analysis Team Seoul Korea 152-053 FOOD. Antoaneta P. Krushevska Mihaly Kotrebai and Ramon M. Barnes University of Massachusetts Department of Chemistry LGRC Tower Box 34510 Amherst MA 01003-4510 CHROMATOGRAPH AND INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PERFORMANCE. G. Pritzl and F. Stuer-Lauridsen Ministry of Environment and Energy National Environmental Research Institute Department of Environmental Chemistry PO Box 358 DK-4000 Roskilde Denmark; A. K. Jensen and T. K. Thorsen University of Rosklide Institute of Life Science and Chemistry PO Box 260 DK-4000 Roskilde Denmark VARIETY OF AQUATIC ENVIRONMENTAL SAMPLE.F. Stuer- Lauridsen' T. K. Thorsen' J. A. Jacobsen' M. M. Larsen' G. Asmund B. Peterson' and G. Pritzl','Ministry of Environment and Energy National Environmental Research Institute Department of Environmental Chemistry PO Box 358 DK-4000 Roskilde Denmark 'University of Roskilde Institute of Life Science and Chemistry PO Box 260 DK-4000 Roskilde Denmark TP9 SCREENING FOR ORGANOMETALLIC COMPOUNDS IN INDUSTRIAL MUNICIPAL SEWAGE SLUDGES AND SOILS MATRIX DIRECT DETERMINATION BY ICP-AES AND TP6 SLURRY NEBULIZATION AND ICP-AES ANALYSIS OF TP7 ON-LINE COUPLING OF CAPILLARY GAS PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETER-OPTIMIZATION AND TPS APPLICATION OF CAPILLARY GC-ICP-MS ON A BY CAPILLARY GC-ICP-MS.M. M. Larsen' ,F. Stuer-Lauridsenl A. K. Jensen' T. K. Thorsen2 and G. Pritzl' 'Ministry of Environment and Energy National Environmental Research Institute Department of Environmental Chemistry PO Box 358 DK-4000 Roskilde Denmark 'University of Roskilde Institute of Life Science and Chemistry PO Box 260 DK-4000 Roskilde Denmark TPlO SEPARATION AND ELEMENTAL ANALYSIS OF VOLATILE COMPOUNDS BY CAPILLARY GAS INDUCTIVELY COUPLED MASS SPECTROMETER. Christophe R. QuCtel Hiroaki Tao Mamoru Tominaga and Akira Miyazaki Water Analysis Division Hydrospheric Environmental Department National Institute for Resources and Environment Onogawa 16-3 Tsukuba-shi Ibaraki 305 Japan TPll RAPID MICROWAVE ASSISTED SAMPLE PREPARATION FOR SPECIATION OF ORGANOTIN IN BIOTISSUES BY EMISSION SPECTROMETRY.Joanna Szpunar Vincent Schmitt Ryszard Lobinski CNRS URA 348 UniversitC of Bordeaux I 33 405 Talence France; Jean-Louis Monod Laboratoire d'hydrologie et molysmologie aquatique FacultC de Pharmacie UnversitC de Marseille 13 385 Marseille France TPlla MICROWAVE INDUCED PLASMA AND STABILIZED CAPACITIVE PLASMA ATOMIC EMISSION FOR TOTAL HALOGENS CONTENT DETERMINATIONS. J. F. Camuiia- Aguilar M. Montes R. Pereiro J. E. Sanchez-Uria and Alfred0 Sanz- Medel Departamento de Quimica Fisica y Analitica Facultad de Quimica Universidad de Oviedo C/Julian Claveria 8 330060vied0 Spain and C. Katschthaler and G. Knapp Institute for Analytical Chemistry Micro- and Radiochemistry Graz University of Technology Graz Austria TP12 CAPILLARY GAS CHROMATOGRAPHY INDUCTIVELY FOR ELEMENTAL SPECIATION.Frank Vanhaecke Tom De Smaele Luc Moens and Richard Dams Laboratory of Analytical Chemistry University of Ghent Institute for Nuclear Sciences Proeftuinstraat 86 B-9000 Ghent Belgium TP12a MEASUREMENT OF RELATIVE BIOAVAILABILITIES OF HEAVY METAL SPECIES IN SEDIMENTS BY USING A MULTIPLE TRACER ISOTOPE TECHNIQUE. Holger Hintelmann and R. Douglas Evans Environmental Science Centre Trent University Peterborough ON K9J 7B8 Canada He-PLASMA AS A GAS CHROMATOGRAPHIC DETECTOR IN TRACE ORGANIC ANALYSIS. Erwin Rosenberg Michael Peck and Manfred Grasserbauer Institute of Analytical Chemistry Vienna University of Technology Getreidmarkt 9/151 A-1060 Vienna Austria CHROMATOGRAPHY COUPLED TO A BENCH-TOP CAPILLARY GC-MICROWAVE INDUCED PLASMA ATOMIC COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY (GC-ICP-MS) TP13 OPTIMIZATION OF A MICROWAVE-INDUCED TP14 ON-LINE MATRIX REMOVAL FOR THE DETERMINATION OF TRACE METALS IN HIGHLY-SALTED WATERS BY ICP-MS.Hiroaki Tao Christophe R. Quetel Mamoru Tominaga and Akira Miyazaki Water Analysis Division Hydrospheric Environmental Department National Institute for Resources and Environment Onogawa 16-3 Tsukuba-shi Ibaraki 305 Japan TP14a POLYMER REAGENT CHEMISTRIES FOR AUTO- MATED PRECONCENTRATION/MATRIX ELIMINATION IN ICP-MASS SPECTROMETRIC ANALYSIS OF SEAWATER. Fred Smith Dan R. Wiederin CETAC Technologies 5600 S. 42nd St. Omaha NE 65127; R. Owens B. Jones MAFF Fisheries Laboratories Rememberance Ave. Burnham-on-Crouch Essex CMO 8HA UK; G. Woods and Cameron W.McLeod Centre for Analytical Sciences Department of Earth Scienes University of Sheffield Sheffield S3 7HP UK TP15 A NOVEL AUTOMATED SAMPLE CONCENTRATION SYSTEM FOR SEMICONDUCTOR APPLICATIONS OUTSIDE OF A CLEAN ROOM ENVIRONMENT. Abelardo Gutierrez and Daniel Wiederin CETAC Technologies Inc. 5600 South 42nd Street Omaha NE 68107 TP16 APPLICATION OF MICRO-CHELATION BEADS AND MICRO-CONCENTRIC NEBULIZATION TO ICPMS DETERMINATION OF METALS IN NATURAL SAMPLES. Robert Sherrell and Paul Field Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences Rutgers University PO Box 231 New Brunswick NJ 08903-023 1; Dan Wiederin and Fred Smith CetacTechnologies 5600 South 42nd St. Omaha NE 6810 TP17 LOW PRESSURE ION EXCHANGE SEPARATION OF CHROMIUM ARSENIC AND SELENIUM WITH DETECTION BY ICP-MS. Dan R.Wiederin CETAC Technologies 5600 S. 42nd St. Omaha NE 68107; Douglas T. Gjerde Sarasep Incorporated 1600 Wyatt Dr. Santa Clara CA 95054 1996 Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry 3 January 8-1 3 1996TP18 SAMPLE PREPARATION FOR ICP-MS PAST AND PRESENT OR A NEW WAY OF LOOKING AT SAMPLE PREPARATION FOR ICP-MS. Paul T. Sigsworth Robert C. Hutton and Dagmar Koller Fisons Instruments VG Elemental Ion Path Road Three Winsford Cheshire CW7 3BX England TP19 THE PRECONCENTRATION OF TRACE METALS ON THE MARINE ALGAE PILAYELLA LITTORALIS. Elma N. V. M. Carrilho and Thomas R. Gilbert Barnett Institute Northeastern University Boston MA 02115 TP20 THE DETERMINATION OF GOLD IN GEOLOGICAL MATERIALS BY FIAS-ICP-MS. Ludwik Halicz Geological Survey of Israel 30 Malkhei Yisrael St.Jerusalem 95501 Israel TP21 METHODS FOR MINIMIZING INTERFERENCES IN HYDRIDE GENERATION ICP SPECTROMETRY. Walter Lund Department of Chemistry University of Oslo PO Box 1033 N-0315 Oslo Norway TP22 THE OPTIMIZATION OF AN ELECTROCHEMICAL HYDRIDE GENERATION TECHNIQUE COUPLED TO MICROWAVE INDUCED PLASMA ATOMIC EMISSION SPECTROMETRY FOR THE DETERMINATION OF ARSENIC. JosC A. C. Broekaert and Claudia Schickling University of Dortmund Department of Chemistry D-44221 Dortmund Germany FLUORESCENCE FOR ANALYSIS OF GENERATED HYDRIDES FOLLOWING LIQUID CHROMATOGRAPHIC SEPARATION. Peter M. Yehl and Julian F. Tyson Department of Chemistry University of Massachusetts Box 34510 Amherst MA TP24 DETERMINATION OF ARSENIC IN SALINE WATERS BY GAS LIQUID SEPARATOR AND ICP-MS DETECTION.John T. Creed and Carol A. Brockhoff U. S. Environmental Protection Agency National Exposure Research Laboratory/Aquatic Research Division 26 W. Martin Luther King Drive Cincinnati OH 45268; Isabel Chamberlain U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Region 10 Manchester Laboratory 7411 Beach Drive E. Port Orchard WA 98366; Matthew L. Magnuson U. S. Environmental Protection Agency National Exposure Research Laboratory/Aquatic Research Division 26 W. Martin Luther King Drive Cincinnati OH 45268 TP25 SPECIATION OF ARSENIC COMPOUNDS BY ION HYDRIDE GENERATION WITH A MEMBRANE SEPARATOR. Matthew L. Magnuson U. S. Environmental Protection Agency National Environmental Research Laboratory/Aquatic Research Division 26 W. Martin Luther King Drive Cincinnati OH 45268; John T.Creed and Carol A. Brockhoff U. S. Environmental Protection Agency National Environmental Research Laboratory/Aquatic Research Division 26 W. Martin Luther King Drive Cincinnati OH 45268 TP26 DETERMINATION OF LOW LEVELS OF PLUTONIUM IN PRESENCE OF URANIUM AND NEPTUNIUM BY IC-ICP-MS. Josefa Maria Barrero Maria Betti Jose Ignacio Garcia Alonso and Lothar Koch Institute for Transuranium Elements Joint Research Centre Commission of the European Communities Postfach 2340,76125 Karlsruhe Germany TP27 SEPARATION OF CATION RADIONUCLIDES IN TECHNIQUES. Orville T. Farmer 111 Monty R. Smith Eric J. Wyse and David Koppenaal Pacific Northwest Laboratory PO Box 999 Richland WA 99352 TP28 MERCURY SPECIATION WITH AN IClICPMS SYSTEM A MARRIAGE OF CONVENIENCE. Brian Buckley Mark Heintz Wei Fang and Willie Johnson EOHSI-Busch Campus Rutgers University Piscataway NJ 08855-1 179 TP29 THE DETERMINATION OF CHLORATE AND BROMATE TP23 SPECIATION STUDIES USING ICP-ATOMIC 01 003-45 10 HYDRIDE GENERATION UTILIZING A MEMBRANE-BASED CHROMATOGRAPHY WITH ICP-MS DETECTION UTILIZING HANFORD ENVIRONMENTAL SAMPLES USING IC-ICP/MS IN DRINKING WATERS BY COUPLED ION CHROM- ATOGRAPHY-INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA-MASS SPECTROMETRY.Howard Handley and Nicola Compton Dynamco Scientific Services 22-30 Sturt Road Frimley Green Surrey GU16 6HZ UK TP30 THE VALIDATION FOR ACCEPTANCE UNDER A UK NATIONAL ACCREDITATION SCHEME (NAMAS) OF OF ORGANOTIN COMPOUNDS IN ENVIRONMENTAL MATRICES. Ben Fairman and Tim Catterick Laboratory of the Government Chemist Queens Road Teddington Middlesex TW 11 OLY UK TP31 ELEMENTAL SPECIATION IN DIETARY SUPPLEMENTS. Douglas T.Heitkemper Forensic Chemistry HPLC-ICP-MS METHOD FOR THE DETERMINATION Center U.S. Food and Drug Administration 1141 Central Parkway Cincinnati OH 45202 SELENIUM SPECIES USING TIME RESOLVED ANALYSIS AND CHROMATOGRAPHIC SOFTWARE. P. Thomas Institut Pasteur de Lille Service Eaux-Environment 1 rue Calmette BP 245 F 59019 Lille CCdex France; R. Hutton FI Elemental Ion Path Road Three Winsford Cheshire CW 7 3BX England TP32a PHYSICAL SPECIATION FOR THE DETERMINATION OF ARSENIC AND SELENIUM IN BIOLOGICAL FLUIDS BY HIGH PERFORMANCE SIZE EXCLUSION MASS SPECTROMETRY. Fu-Hsiang KO Feng-Chi Tsao and Mo-Hsiung Yang Department of Nuclear Science National Tsing Hua University Hsinchu 30043 Taiwan THERMOSPRAY NEBULIZATION.Hans Vanhoe Steven Saverwijns Luc Moens and Richard Dams Laboratory or Analytical Chemistry University of Ghent Institute for Nuclear Sciences Proeftuinstraat 86 B-9000 Ghent Belgium TP33a THE ROLE OF HPLC-ICP-MS AND HPLC- RESEARCH. Erik H. Larsen National Food Agency of Denmark Institute of Food Chemistry and Nutrition 19 Merrkhoj Bygade DK-2860 Serborg Denmark TP34 THE ANALYSIS OF SELENIUM IN BLOOD SERUM BY INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY. Fadi R. Abou-Shakra Margaret P. Rayman and Neil I. Ward Department of Chemistry University of Surrey Guildford Surrey GU2 5XH UK TP35 ANALYSIS OF HIGH DISSOLVED SOLIDS SOLUTIONS USING A DIRECT INJECTION NEBULIZER. Dan R. Wiederin CETAC Technologies 5600 S. 42nd St. Omaha NE 68107 TP36 USING A DIRECT INJECTION NEBULIZER TO IMPROVE CHROMATOGRAPHY.John Gomez Yokogawa Analytical Systems 2-1 1-19 Naka-cho Musashino-shi Tokyo 180 Japan TP37 RECOGNITION OF METALLODRUGS BY BLOOD PLASMA PROTEINS INVESTIGATIONS USING INJECTION NEBULIZATION (DIN). Bernie M. Keohane Hongyan Li Mina Kashani Rachel Kumarsingh Peter J. Sadler and Hongzhe Sun Birkbeck College Chemistry Department Gordon House 29 Gordon Square London WClH OPP UK BY USE OF HPLC-ICP-MS. Ingvar A. Bergdahl and Andrejs Schutz Department of Occupational and Environmental Medicine University Hospital S-221 85 Lund Sweden TP39 NEW INVESTIGATIONS INTO THE PLASMA PROTEIN BINDING PROPERTIES OF CISDIAMMINE [( BIS( PHOSPHONAT0METHYL)AMINO)-ACETATO( 2-)-01,N1] ETAAS. Thorsten J. Einhauser Markus Galanski and Bernhard K.Keppler Anorganische-Chemisches Institut Im Neuenheimer Feld 270 69120 Heidelberg Germany BINDING PROTEINS IN DIFFERENT BUFFERS BY CAPILLARY ELECTROPHORESIS (CE) AND INDUCTIVELY Qinghong Lu and Ramon M. Barnes Lederle Graduate Research Tower Box 34510 University of Massachusetts Amherst MA TP41 EVALUATION OF ADSORPTION OF METALS TO ELECTROPHORESIS CAPILLARIES USING INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY. Susan M. Bird and Ramon M. Barnes Department of Chemistry Lederle Graduate Research Center University of Massachusetts Box 345 10 Amherst TP42 ALTERNATIVES TO CHROMATOGRAPHY CAPILLARY TP32 HPLC-ICP-MS DETERMINATION OF ARSENIC AND CHROMATOGRAPHY-INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA TP33 ARSENIC SPECIATION BY ICP-MS WITH ELECTROSPRAY-MS IN BIOLOGICAL SPECIATION CHROMATOGRAPHY LINKED TO ICP-MS WITH DIRECT TP38 PROTEIN-BOUND LEAD IN ERYTHROCYTES STUDIED PLATINUM (11) DBP AND CISPLATIN BY ICP-OES AND TP40 DETECTION AND QUANTIFICATION OF METAL- COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY (ICP-MS).01003-4510 MA 01003-4510 FREE-FLOW ELECTROPHORESIS FOR PREPARATIVE AND ANALYTICAL SEPARATIONS IN PLASMA SPECTRO- CHEMISTRY. Michael E. Ketterer Gary E. Kozerski Department of Chemistry John Carroll University University Heights OH 441 18; Robert Ritacco and Prabha Painuly EM Separations Technology P.O. Box 352 Wakefield RI 02880-0352 TP43 CAPILLARY ELECTROPHORESIS WITH ICP DETECTION UTILIZING AN ULTRASONIC NEBULIZER INTERFACE. Peter W. Kirlew and Joseph A. Caruso Department of Chemistry Mail Location 172 University of Cincinnati Cincinnati OH 45221-0172 1996 Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry 3 January 8-1 3 1996TP44 COUPLING CAPILLARY ELECTROPHORESIS TO JCP-MS.A. B. Sulaiman and B. L. Sharp Department of Chemistry Loughborough University of Technology Loughborough Leicesterchire LEll 3TU UK FOR INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY. Lanqing Wang and Richard F. Browner School of Chemistry & Biochemistry Georgia Institute of Technology Atlanta GA 30332-4000 TP45a ON-LINE COUPLING OF CE (CAPILLARY ELECTROPHORESIS) TO AN ICP-MS. Peter Schramel and B. Michalke GSF-Research Center for Environment and Health Institute of Ecological Chemistry Neuherberg D-85758 Oberschleipheim Germany TP46 AEROSOL DEPOSITION FOR ICP-AES AND MS. Jean- Franqois Alary Robin Rattray Elizabeth Brown and Eric D.Salin McGill University Department of Chemistry 801 Sherbrooke Street West Montreal PQ H3A 2K5 Canada INSERTION-ICP-AES. V. Karanassios and T. Wood University of Waterloo Department of Chemistry Waterloo ON N2L 3G1 Canada TP48 DIRECT ELEMENTAL ANALYSIS OF SOLIDS BY SPARK ABLATION ICP-AES. V. Karanassios M. Willeke and 2. Zhang University of Waterloo Department of Chemistry Waterloo ON N2L 3G1 Canada TP49 DIRECT POWDER INTRODUCTION INTO THE ICP A WINDOW FOR THE LOST ANALYTICAL INFORMATION. Nimal De Silva Mineral Resources Division Geological Survey of Canada 601 Booth Street Ottawa ON K1A OE8 Canada; Roger Guevremont Institute for Environmental Research and Technology National Research Council of Canada Montreal Road Ottawa ON K1A OR6 Canada PALLADIUM.N. J. Miller-Ihli and R. W. Fonseca USDA Beltsville Human Nutrition Research Center Food Composition Laboratory Beltsville MD 20705 SPECIATION. Les Ebdon TP45 CHARACTERIZATION OF MICRO-FLOW NEBULIZERS TP47 MIXED-GAS PLASMAS IN DIRECT SAMPLE TP50 ETV-ICP-MS TRANSPORT WARS OXYGEN ASHING VS. 530 PD2 EVALUATING THE FEASIBILITY OF IN- VZVO METAL Wednesday January 10,19% 800 PL3 FUTURE OF PLASMA SPECTROCHEMICAL INSTRUMENTATION. Gary M. Hieftje 5. Laser Assisted Plasma Spectrometry Gary M. Hieftje Chairman Jean-Michel Mermet Laboratoire des Science Analytiques Universite Claude Bernard Lyon 1 Bat. 308,69622 Villeurbanne Cedex France 945 W1 LASER ABLATION INDUCTIVELY COUPLED INFLUENCING THE AMOUNT AND COMPOSITION OF THE ABLATED VAPOR. R. E. Russo X.L. Mao M. Caetano M. A. Shannon W.-T. Chan and P. K. Leung Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Berkeley CA 94720 1005 W2 OPTICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF LASER ABLATION PARTICLE PRODUCTION AND PLASMA DIGESTION PROCESSES IN LASER ABLATION ICP/MS. Michael L. Alexander Monty R. Smith Albert Mendoza and David W. Koppenaal Pacific Northwest Laboratory PO Box 999 Richland WA 99352 1025 W3 NEW APPROACHES TO CALIBRATION FOR EXCIMER LASER ABLATION ICP-MS. B. L. Sharp and B. J. Masters Department of Chemistry Loughborough University of Technology Loughborough Leicesterchire LEll 3TU UK AN IDEAL SOLUTION FOR THE ANALYSIS OF NUCLEAR MATERIALS? Phillip Goodall and Stephen G. Johnson Argonne National Laboratory-West PO Box 2528 Idaho Falls ID 83403 SPECTROSCOPY (LIBS) INSTRUMENTATION.David A. Cremers and Monty J. Ferris Group CST-1 MS 5565 Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos NM 87545; James D. Blacic and Donald R. Pettit Group EES-1 MS D Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos NM 87545 915 IL8 CURRENT STATUS OF LASER ABLATION ICP-AES. PLASMA-ATOMIC EMISSION SPECTROSCOPY FACTORS 1045 W4 LASER SPECTROMETRY AND LASER ABLATION- 11H W5 FIELD-BASED LASER-INDUCED BREAKDOWN 1 1:25 W6 ANALYSIS OF LASER-GENERATED TRANSIENTS WITH AN INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA TIME-OF- FLIGHT MASS SPECTROMETER. Patrick P. Mahoney Gangqiang Li Steven J. Ray and Gary Hieftje Department of Chemistry Indiana University Bloomington IN 47405 11:45 W7 ENHANCEMENTS IN SENSITIVITY AND 1996 Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry 3 January 8- RESOLUTION IN SMALL-SPOT LASER ABLATION ICP-MS.Evan R. Cromwell IBM Storage Systems m/s E35/282,5600 Cottle Rd San Jose CA 95193 6. Plasma Instrumentation and Software Vassili Karanassios Chairman 1:lO IL9 PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY ARE WE USING THE RIGHT SOURCE? Gary Horlick Department of Chemistry University of Alberta Edmonton AB T6G 2G2 Canada INSTRUMENT FOR FUNDAMENTAL PLASMA STUDIES. Norman N. Sesi Paul Galley David Hanselman Julie Homer Mao Huang and Gary M. Hieftje Department of Chemistry Indiana University Bloomington IN 47405 200 W9 AUTOMATIC OPERATING PARAMETER AND METHODOLOGY SELECTION FOR ICP-AES. Wayne Branagh Ciara Whelan and Eric D. Salin McGill University Department of Chemistry 801 Sherbrooke Street West Montreal PQ H3A 2K5 Canada 2:20 W10 ANALYSIS OF SOILS USING MULTIVARIATE SIGNAL QUANTITATION ICP-OES.Marc L. Salit National Institute of Standards and Technology Chemistry 222 B220 Gaithersburg MD 20899; Dennis Yates Perkin-Elmer Corporation 761 Main Avenue Norwalk CT 06859-0215 SIGNAL PROCESSING IN ICP-AES. V. Karanassios P. Drouin University of Waterloo Department of Chemistry Waterloo ON N2L 3G1 Canada; G. Spiers Ontario Geological Survey Sudbury ON Canada 1:40 W8 DEVELOPMENT OF AN IMAGING-BASED 2:40 W11 A USER INTERFACE FOR 1-D CROSS-CORRELATION Wednesday Poster Session Automation Instrumentation Laser Assisted Plasma Spectrometry Software Laser Assisted Plasma Spectrometry WP1 LASER ABLATION CAN ONE LASER BE USED TO SAMPLE ALL SOLIDS? Monty R. Smith Michael L. Alexander John S. Hartman and David W. Koppenaal Pacific Northwest Laboratory PO Box 999 Richland WA 99352 WP2 LASER INDUCED BREAKDOWN SPECTROSCOPY OF GEOLOGICAL MATERIALS.Aaron Koskelo Thomas Gamble and Thomas Lippert CST-1 MS-J565 Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos NM 87545 WP3 EFFECT OF SOIL MATRIX ON ELEMENTAL ANALYSIS (LIBS). Ming Moy Group CST-15 MS E531 Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos NM 87545; David A. Cremers and Christopher P. Junk Group CST-1 MS 5565 Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos NM 87545 WP4 EFFECT OF SAMPLING GEOMETRY ON ELEMENTAL SPECTROSCOPY. David A. Cremers Leeann Foster and Monty Ferris Group CST-1 MS 5565 Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos NM 87545 WP5 QUANTITATIVE ELEMENTAL DETERMINATION IN INDIVIDUAL FLUID INCLUSIONS BY LASER ABLATION ICPMS APPLICATIONS TO Sr AND Rb MEASUREMENTS IN FLUID INCLUSIONS IN HALITE.A. Mohamad Ghazi Department of Geology Georgia State University Atlanta GA 30303; Tom E. McCandless and Joaquin Ruiz Department of Geoscience University of Arizona Tuscon AZ 85721 WP6 MONITORING HISTORICAL CHANGES IN WATER QUALITY IN LAKE ERIE AN APPLICATION OF LASER ABLATION MICROPROBE-ICP-MS. R. Douglas Evans Environmental Sciences Centre Trent University Petersborough ON Canada K9J 7B8; John M. Casselman Research Science and Technology Branch Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources RR #4 Picton ON. Canada KOK 2TO J. Westheide J. S. Becker J. A. C. Broekaert* and H.-J. Dietze Zentralabteilung fur Chemische Analysen Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH D-52428 Julich Germany *Fachbereich Chemie Universitat Dortmund P.O.Box 500500 D-442277 Germany WP8 FUNDAMENTAL PERFORMANCE OF UV LASER ABLATION ICP-MS. Don Potter Hewlett-Packard Co. 2850 Centerville Rd. Wilmington DE 19808; Jim Zhu Cetac Technologies 5600 South 42nd St. Omaha NE 68107 MASS SPECTROMETRY FOR PuOz ANALYSIS. Deborah Figg Chris Brink and Michael Kahr Los Alamos National Laboratory MS E518 Los Alamos NM 87545 W P l O GEOLASER PROBE-A VERSATILE LASER ABLATION SYSTEM FOR THE DIRECT ANALYSIS OF GEOLOGICAL USING LASER-INDUCED BREAKDOWN SPECTROSCOPY ANALYSIS USING LASER-INDUCED BREAKDOWN WP7 ANALYSIS OF PEROVSKITE LAYERS BY LA-ICP-MS. WP9 LASER ABLATION-INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA- .13 1996MATERIALS BY ICP-AES AND MS. J. Zhu CETAC Technologies Inc. 5600 South 42nd Street Omaha Nebraska 68107; I. B. Brenner Geological Survey of Israel 30 Malkhe Israel Street Jerusalem Israel 95501 WPll SPECTRAL IMAGING STUDIES OF THE LASER PLASMA AS IT RELATES TO ANALYTICAL PERFORMANCE.Rosalie Multari David Cremers and Leeann Foster Group CST-1 MS 5565 Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos NM 87545 BIOLOGICAL MATERIALS USING AQUEOUS STANDARDS. B. J. Masters and B. L. Sharp Department of Chemistry Loughborough University of Technology Loughborough Leicesterchire LE11 3TU UK ICP-MS. D. Giinther C. Heinrich Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich Department of Isotope Geology and Mineral Resources CH-8092 Zurich Switzerland; S. E. Jackson and H. P. Longerich Memorial University of Newfoundland Earth Sciences Department St. John’s NF A1B 3x5 Canada WP14 LASER ABLATION PROCESS IN LA-ICP-MS.H. Cousin B. Magyar Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich Laboratory of Inorganic Chemistry CH-8092 Zurich Switzerland; D. Gunther and C. Heinrich Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich Department of Isotope Geology and Mineral Resources CH-8092 Zurich Switzerland WP12 EXCIMER LA-ICP-MS FOR THE ANALYSIS OF WP13 ANALYSIS OF FLUID INCLUSIONS USING LAM- WP15 LASER ABLATION MICROPROBE-INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA-MASS SPECTROMETRY (LAM-ICP-MS) OF GEOLOGICAL MATERIALS. Henry P. Longerich Simon E. Jackson Lance Forsythe and Ingo Horn Department of Earth Sciences and Centre for Earth Resources Research Memorial University of Newfoundland St. John’s NF A1B 3x5 Canada WP16 DIRECT SOLID SAMPLING WITH LASER ABLATION PRINCIPLES AND APPLICATIONS. Ulrich Greb Lothar Rottmann and Ernst Schroder Finnigan MAT GmbH Barkhausenstr.2 D-28197 Bremen Germany WP17 COMPARISON OF QUADRUPOLE AND MAGNETIC SECTOR ICP-MS FOR LASER ABLATION STUDIES. Robert C. Hutton Nicola M. Reed and Angelika Raith Fisons Instruments VG Elemental Ion Path Road Three Winsford Cheshire CW7 3BX England WP17a APPLICATION OF LASER ABLATION ICP-MS AS A MEANS OF OBTAINING INFORMATION ON SPATIAL CHANGES IN ELEMENT CONCENTRATION IN PLANT TISSUE. Erwin Hoffmann C. Ludke H. Scholze and H. Stephanowitz Institut fur Spektrochemie und angewandte Spektroskopie (ISAS) Laboratorium fur spektroskopische Methoden der Umweltanalytik (LSMU) Rudower Chaussee 5 D-12484 Berlin Germany Computer Posters WP18C ICP-AES SYSTEM DIAGNOSIS USING QUID. Eric D. Salin Jean-Frangois Alary Christine Sartoros and Jean-Michel Mermet McGill University Department of Chemistry 801 Sherbrooke Street West Montreal PQ H3A 2K5 Canada WP19C A WINDOWS BASED AUTOMATED QUALITY ISOLATION PILOT PLANT ( WIPP) BRINES.Daniel J. Gerth CST-9 MS G740 Los Alamos National laboratory Los Alamos NM 87545 WP19aC THE ATOMIC SPECTROSCOPY CD-ROM- PRELIMINARY REPORT. Gary Horlick Gregory s. Fulton and Liu Shi Department of Chemistry University of Alberta Edmonton AB T6G 2G2 Canada Automation Instrumentation Software WP20 QUANTITATIVE METHODS FOR CHOOSING Goode Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry University of South Carolina Columbia SC 29208 WP21 EVALUATION OF MULTIVARIATE SOFTWARE PACKAGES FOR THE ANALYSIS OF TRACE ELEMENT DATA FOR GEOGRAPHIC ORIGIN DETERMINATION OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS.Robert S. Schwartz David M. Carnes Le T. Hecking Thomas D. Sheehan and John L. Sullivan 1301 Constitution Ave. NW Room 71 13 Washington DC 20229 WP22 ELEMENTAL ANALYSIS IN THE INVESTIGATION OF COUNTERFEIT PHARMACEUTICAL COMPOUNDS. Brenda S. Zimmer and Cynthia M. Gaston U.S. FDA Forensic Chemistry Center 1141 Central Parkway Cincinnati OH 45202 WP23 CORRECTION OF MASS SPECTRAL INTERFERENCES ON IRON BY MATHEMATICAL METHOD (PLS). Mihhly Kotrebai Dula Amarasiriwardena* Eryi Zhu Antoaneta Krushevska and Ramon M. Barnes Department of Chemistry Lederle Graduate ICP-MS AND GLOW DISCHARGE MASS SPECTROMETRY- CONTROL SYSTEM FOR THE ICP-AES ANALYSIS OF WASTE INTERNAL STANDARD ELEMENTS IN ICP-AES. Scoot R. Research Center University of Massachusetts Box 34510 Amherst MA 01003-4510 *School of Natural Science Hampshire College Amherst MA 01002 WP23a A CLOSER LOOK AT INTERFERENCE CORRECTION AND EPA METHOD 6020.Mark Shipman Pace Inc. 1455 McDowell Blvd. North Suite D Petaluma CA 94954 and Steve Wilbur Hewlett- Packard Company 2850 Centerville Rd. Wilmington DE 19808 Dymott and P. K. Booth AT1 Unicam York Street Cambridge CB1 2PX United Kingdom P. Neal T. C. Dymott and P. K. Booth AT1 Unicam York Street Cambridge CB12PX United Kingdom ICP-AES. V. Karanassios P. Drouin University of Waterloo Department of Chemistry Waterloo ON N2L 3G1 Canada; R. Kellerman University of Waterloo Department of Earth Sciences Waterloo ON N2L 3G1 Canada PLASMA. J. Roine M. Asikainen T. Harju V. Siemens and K. Larjava VTT Chemical Technology Environmental Technology P.O.Box 1403 FIN-02044 VTT Espoo Finland WP28 LONG TERM QUALITY CONTROL AND DIAGNOSIS OF INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA SEQUENTIAL EMISSION SPECTROMETERS. 0. Samuel Jobin-Yvon BP 118 91163 Longjumeau Cedex France; E. Poussel and J. M. Mermet Universitt Claude Bernard Lyon 1,69622 Villeurbanne Cedex France WP28a IMPROVING SHORT-TERM AND LONG-TERM INTERNAL STANDARDIZATION WITH EMISSION LINES OF MATRIX ELEMENTS. Jason J. Li Technical Assistance Laboratories Osram Sylvania Inc. 71 Cherry Hill Dr. Beverly MA 01915 WP29 THE ANALYSIS OF BIOMEDICAL MATRICES USING A EMISSION SPECTROMETER. Karen W. Barnes and Evelyn Prusak The Perkin-Elmer Corporation 761 Main Ave. Mail Stop 215 Norwalk CT 06859-0215 WP30 AXIAL VIEWING OF AN ICP WITH A GRAPHITE TORCH INJECTOR.R. K. Winge N. Praphairaksit and R. S. Houk Ames Laboratory-US Department of Energy Department of Chemistry Iowa State University Ames IA 5001 1 ANALYSIS OF HIGH DISSOLVED SOLID. Dion Tsourides Spectro Analytical Instruments 160 Authority Drive Fitchburg MA 0 1420 WP32 THE INFLUENCE OF RESOLUTION ON THE ULTRATRACE DETECTION LIMITS. Lisa Goldstone Odile Samuel and Christophe Deraed JY Emission Division Instruments SA Inc. 3880 Park Avenue Edison NJ 08820 WP32a EXPERIENCES WITH THE NEW JY66P ICP-AES SPECTROMETER WITH AXIAL TORCH. Peter Schramel GSF- Research Center for Environment and Health Institute of Ecological Chemistry Neuherberg D-85758 Oberschleipheim Germany WP33 A COMPARISON OF INTERNAL STANDARD AND STANDARD ADDITIONS FOR DIFFICULT SAMPLES BY AXIAL ICP.Christine Flajnik and Jerry Shkolnik Varian OSI 201 Hansen Court Suite 108 Wood Dale IL 60191 WP34 AXIAL VIEWING DIRECT SAMPLE INSERTION. Cameron Skinner and Eric D. Satin McGill University Department of Chemistry 801 Sherbrooke Street West Montreal PQ H3A 2K5 Canada WP35 AUTOMATIC SAMPLE RECOGNITION. Christine Sartoros and Eric D. Salin McGill University Department of Chemistry 801 Sherbrooke Street West Montreal PQ H3A 2K5 Canada WP36 DEVELOPMENT AND CHARACTERIZATION OF AN SYSTEM. V. Karanassios and T. Wood University of Waterloo Department of Chemistry Waterloo ON N2L 3G1 Canada WP37 DIRECT DETERMINATION OF Pb IN GASOLINE USING Brenner* A. Zander J. Shkolnik and S. Kim Ginzton Research Center Varian Associates 3075 Hansen Way Palo Alto CA 94304 Varian Optical Spectroscopy Instruments 201 Hansen Court Wood Dale IL 60191; *On leave from the Geological Survey of Israel 30 Malkhe Israel Street Jerusalem Israel 95501 WP37a LOW UV PERFORMANCE OF AN ICP-AES FOR COMPLETE OIL ANALYSIS.Sue F. Franz and Dion Tsourides Spectro Analytical Instruments Inc. 160 Authority Dr. Fitchburg MA 01420 WP24 USEABILITY-IT’S ALL IN THE INTERFACE. T. C. WP25 THE POSSIBILITIES OF PPT ANALYSIS IN ICP-AES. WP26 2-D CROSS-CORRELATION SIGNAL PROCESSING IN WP27 A NEW RADIO-FREQUENCY INDUCTIVELY COUPLED ANALYTICAL PRECISION OF ICP-AES ANALYSES BY DUAL VIEW INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA-OPTICAL WP31 EVALUATION OF END-ON-PLASMA ICP-AES FOR THE SENSITIVITY OF ICP-AES A NON-AXIAL APPROACH TO AUTOMATED DIRECT SAMPLE INSERTION-ICP-AES EMULSIFICATION AND h AND h-OXYGEN ICP-AES.I. B. 1996 Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry 3 January 8-1 3 1996WP37b UNIVERSAL CALIBRATION” FOR ANALYSIS OF ORGANIC SOLUTIONS BY ICP-AES. Robert I. Botto Exxon Chemical Company Baytown Chemicial Plant Laboratory Baytown TX 77520 and Jim J. Zhu Cetax Technologies 5600 S. 42nd St. Omaha NE 68107 WP38 DETERMINATION OF ALUMINUM IN OF FACTORS AFFECTING THE LINE INTENSITIES OF DIFFERENT EMISSION LINES. Lilli Paama Institute of Chemical Physics University of Tartu 2 Jakobi Street EE2400 Tartu Estonia; Paavo Peramaki and Lauri H. J. Lajunen Department of Chemistry University of Oulu SF 90571 Oulu Finland WP39 ANALYSIS OF WASTE ISOLATION PILOT PLANT (WIPP) BRINES FOR TARGET ANALYTES USING A CHARGE METHOD DEVELOPMENT. Daniel J.Gerth CST-9 MS G740 Los Alamos National laboratory Los Alamos NM 87545 TRACE ELEMENTAL COMPOSITION OF INDUSTRIAL ETHENE GAS BY MEANS OF INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY. H. Klinkenberg B. J. Kip and W. Van Borm DSMR search Dept. PAC P.O. Box 18 NL-6160 MD Geleen The Netherlands 530 PD3 HOW TO HANDLE HARD SAMPLE ANALYSIS. JosC Broekaert ENVIRONMENTAL SAMPLES BY ICP-AES A COMPARISON INJECTION DEVICE (CID) EQUIPPED ICP-AES PART I WP40 THE CONTINUOUS ON-LINE MONITORING OF THE Thursday January 11,1996 7. Excitation Mechanisms and Plasma Phenomena Michael W. Blades Chairman CHEMICAL ICP DISCHARGES STATUS. Daniel Schram J. M. de Regt D. Benoy and J. A. M. van der Mullen Depart- ment of Physics Eindhoven University of Technology P.O. Box 513 5600 MB Eindhoven The Netherlands 915 ILlO OPTICAL DIAGNOSTICS INSIDE AN ICP/MS.Paul B. Farnsworth Department of Chemistry Brigham Young University Provo UT 84602 945 ILll CURRENT DESCRIPTION OF FUNDAMENTAL SIGNALS. John Olesik Laboratory for Plasma Spectrochemistry Laser Spectroscopy and Mass Spectroscopy The Ohio State University Department of Geological Sciences 275A Scott Hall Columbus OH 43210 10:15 Thl MECHANISM OF IONIZATION IN THE INDUCTIVELY COUPLED ‘COLD’ PLASMA INTERPRETED THROUGH MATRIX SUPPRESSION EFFECTS. Scott D. Tanner SCIEX@ 71 Four Valley Drive Concord ON L4K 4V8 Canada 1035 Th2 ARGON ION AND MATRIX POLYATOMIC LOSS PHENOMENA IN ICP/MS AND ICP/ITMS. Gregory C. Eiden Charles J. Barinaga and David W. Koppenaal Pacific Northwest Laboratory PO Box 999 Richland WA 99352 1055 Th3 INTERELEMENT INTERFERENCE EFFECTS IN INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA SPECTROMETRY.Norman N. Sesi Gary M. Hieftje Scott Lehn and Kathryn Shanks Department of Chemistry Indiana University Bloomington IN 47405 11:15 Th4 MASS SPECTROMETRIC AND THEORETICAL INVESTIGATIONS ON FORMATION OF RARE GAS MOLECULAR IONS IN DIFFERENT PLASMAS. J. S. Becker G. Seifert* and H.-J. Dietze Zentralabteilung fur Chemische Analysen Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH D-52428 Julich Germany *Institut fur Theoretische Physik Technische Universitat Dresden D-01062 Dresden Germany 11:35 Th5 MATHEMATICAL MODELING OF THE BEHAVIOR OF THE SPUTTERED ATOMS AND CORRESPONDING IONS IN A DIRECT CURRENT GLOW DISCHARGE. Annemie Bogaerts and Renaat Gijbels Department of Chemistry University of Antwerp (UIA) Universiteitsplein 1 B-2610 Wilrijk-Antwerp Belgium 800 PL4 FUNDAMENTAL DESCRIPTION OF SPECTRO- PROCESSES THAT CONTROL ICP-OES AND ICP-MS 8.Sample Preparation and Standards for Plasma Spectroscopy H.M. ‘Skip’ Kingston Chairman 1:lO IL12 SAMPLE PREPARATION PROGRESS AND CHALLENGES. Gunter Knapp Department of Analytical Chemistry Micro- and Radiochemistry Graz University of Technology A-8010 Graz Austria 1:40 Th6 DIRECT SOLID SAMPLE DIGESTION AND INTRODUCTION USING HALOGENATING REAGENTS. Jan Hamier and Eric D. Salin McGill University Department of Chemistry 801 Sherbrooke Street West Montreal PQ H3A 2K5 Canada 200 Th7 PERFORMANCE BASED ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE MICROWAVE METHODS FOR ANALYTICAL SAMPLE PREPARATION. Stuart J. Chalk Elke Lorentzen Wenchun Jiang H.M. ‘Skip’ Kingston Duquesne University Chemistry Department Mellon Hall Pittsburgh PA 15282 220 Th8 THE PROCEDURE OF SPECTROCHEMICAL ANALYSIS HOW TO ACHIEVE ACCURACY? Knut D. Ohls University of Muenster Department of Analytical Chemistry c/o Buengerstr. 7 D-44267 Dortmund Germany 240 Th9 NEW EPA ENVIRONMENTAL MICROWAVE SAMPLE PREPARATION METHODS FOR ICP’S. H. M. ‘Skip’ Kingston Dan B. Taylor Peter J. Walter Denwei Huo Dirk Link and Don Nogay Duquesne University Chemistry Department Mellon Hall Pittsburgh PA 15282 Thursday Poster Session Applications Glow Discharge Atomic and Mass Spectrometry Mechanisms Plasma Sources Sample Preparation Standards Teaching Spectroscopy Plasma Sources Diagnostics Mechanisms ThPl FUNDAMENTAL PROPERTIES OF AN ICP WITH A GRAPHITE TORCH INJECTOR.P. S. Clemons R. S. Houk and N. Praphairaksit Ames Laboratory-US Department of Energy Department of Chemistry Iowa State University Ames IA 5001 1 ThP2 DIAGNOSTICS OF THE ENCLOSED INDUCTIVELY Alexander Bol’shakov and Ramon M. Barnes University of Massachusetts Department of Chemistry Box 34510 Amherst MA ThP3 PRESSURE DEPENDENCE OF THE DISCHARGE CHARACTERISTICS IN AN ENCLOSED ICP. Ana M. Gaillat Greenfield Community College 1 College Dr. Greenfield MA 01301 and Ramon M. Barnes Department of Chemistry Lederle Graduate Research Center University of Massachusetts Box 34510 Amherst ThP4 OPEN FLOW ENCLOSED INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA A MATHEMATICAL SIMULATION. Ana M. Gaillat Greenfield Community College 1 College Dr. Greenfield MA 01301; Ramon M. Barnes Department of Chemistry Lederle Graduate Research Center University of Massachusetts Box 34510 Amherst MA 01003-45 10; Pierre Proulx Department of Chemical Engineering University of Sherbrooke Sherbrooke PQ J1K 2R1 Canada ThP5 THERMODYNAMIC APPROACH TO THE OPTIMIZATION OF INSTRUMENTAL PARAMETERS IN INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA ATOMIC FLUORESCENCE SPECTROMETRY FOR THE ANALYSIS OF SUPERCONDUCTORS.Galina N. Maso and Alexander A. Galkin Inorganic Chemistry Division Department of Chemistry Moscow State University Vorobievy Gory B-234 GSP Moscow 119899 Russia; George G. Glavin Department of Chemistry University of Massachusetts Box 34510 Amherst MA 01003-4510 ThP6 EVALUATION OF OPTICAL SYSTEMS USED FOR SPATIAL MAPPING AND THEIR EFFECTS ON ABEL INVERTED MAPS. Michael E. Rider and Scott R.Goode Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry University of South Carolina Columbia SC 29208 ThP7 EXCITED MERCURY DENSITY MEASUREMENTS IN A Hg-Kr INDUCTIVELY COUPLED DISCHARGE. J. Darryl Michael GE Lighting 1975 Noble Rd. Cleveland OH 44112 FREQUENCY CAPACITIVELY COUPLED DISCHARGES COUPLE WITH ELECTROTHERMAL SAMPLE INTRODUCTION. Md. M. Rahman and M. W. Blades University of British Columbia Department of Chemistry Vancouver BC V6T 1Z1 Canada ThP9 MEASUREMENT OF TEMPERATURE AND ANALYTE SPATIAL EMISSION AND ABSORPTION PROFILES FOR A FAPES SOURCE. C. W. LeBlanc and M. W. Blades Department of Chemistry University of British Columbia Vancouver BC V6T 1Z1 Canada ThPlO SPECTROCHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF TRACE CONTAMINANTS IN He (He/F,) PULSED DISCHARGE PLASMAS. A.Treshchalov A. Chizhik and A. Vill Institute of Physics Estonian Academy of Sciences Riia 142 EE2400 Tartu Estonia INDUCED PLASMA DURING SAMPLE INTRODUCTION. Dr. Scott R. Goode and Joe N. Emily Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry University of South Carolina Columbia SC 29208 MICROWAVE-INDUCED PLASMAS. T. Harju K. Larjava J. Roine and V. Siemens VTT Chemical Technology Environmental Technology P.O. Box 1403 FIN-02044 VTT Espoo Finland COUPLED PLASMA IN CHLORINE-ARGON MIXTURES. 01003-45 10 MA 01003-4510 ThP8 TRACE ELEMENT ANALYSIS USING RADIO- ThPll SPATIAL CHANGES IN THE HELIUM MICROWAVE- ThP12 STUDY OF MIXED-GAS AND MOLECULAR GAS 1996 Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry 3 January 8-1 3 1996ThP13 CHEMICAL SYNTHESIS USING AN INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA.Thomas J. Manning Department of Chemistry Valdosta State University Valdosta GA 31698 COEFFICIENTS OF SPECTRAL LINES FOR SOME ELEMENTS. Rafkat Toukhvatoulline Gerson Feldmann and Roque- Julci Muenchen Universidade Regional do Noroeste do E$tado do RS Departamento de Fisica Estatistica e Matematica-UNIJUI Cx. Postal 560 CEP 98700-000 Ijui RS Brazil ThP15 THE PRESSURE A CRITICAL PARAMETER IN THE PROCESS OF MOLECULAR DISSOCIATION USING IONIZATIONS APPEARANCE. Silvestru Popescu Research Institute for Electrical Engineering Bistrita Subsidiary Str. Parcului nr. 7 RO-4400 Bistrita Romania Applications and Sample Preparation ANALYTES BY INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA ATOMIC EMISSION SPECTROMETRY. Gary L. Beck and Frank Maeda Teledyne Wah Chang P.O. Box 460 Albany OR 97321 ThP17 ANALYSIS OF HYDROGEN BROMIDE USING ENCLOSED INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA ATOMIC SPECTROMETRY.George G. Glavin and Ramon M. Barnes Chemistry Department Lederle GRC Tower University of Massachusetts Box 34510 Amherst MA 01003-4510 LUBRICATING OILS CONTAINING VISCOSITY MODIFIERS. Jeffrey M. Carey and John J. Mattern The Lubrizol Corporation 29400 Lakeland Blvd. Wickliffe OH 44092-2298 [( BIS( PHOSPHONAT0METHYL)AMINO)-ACETATO( 2)-0' N'] INHIBITING COMPOUND IN MICE BY ATOMIC SPECTROSCOPY. Thorsten J. Einhauser and Bernhard K. Keppler Anorganische-Chemisches Institut Im Neuenheimer Feld 270 69120 Heidelberg Germany ThP20 DETERMINATION OF TRACE ELEMENTS IN HUMAN HIGH TEMPERATURE DIGESTION. Dula Amarasiriwardena School of Natural Science Hampshire College Amherst MA 01002; Mihali Kotrebai Antoaneta Krushevska and Ramon M.Barnes Department of Chemistry Lederle Graduate Research Center Box 34510 University of Massachusetts Amherst MA 01003-4510 DIGESTION OF SMALL BIOLOGICAL SAMPLES FOR THE DETERMINATION OF TRACE ELEMENTS BY INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA ATOMIC EMISSION SPECTROMETRY. Dula Amarasiriwardena School of Natural Science Hampshire College Amherst MA 01002; Antoaneta Krushevska and Ramon M. Barnes Department of Chemistry Lederle Graduate Research Center Box 34510 University of Massachusetts Amherst MA 01003-4510 ThP22 ANALYSIS OF SIC AFTER MICROWAVE HEATING FUSION WITH ICP-AES. Eva Reitznerova and Ramon M. Barnes Department of Chemistry Lederle Graduate Research Center University of Massachusetts Box 34510 Amherst MA 01001-4510 ThP23 APPLICATIONS USING ALTERNATIVE TEMPERATURE CONTROL IN ANALYTICAL MICROWAVE SYSTEMS. Leo W.Collins 01 Analytical P.O. Box 9010 College Station TX 77842-9010 ThP24 CLEAN LABORATORY CHEMISTRY FOR THE MICROWAVE ASSISTED DIGESTION OF BOTANICAL SAMPLES. Charles B. Rhoades Jr. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Bowman Gray Technical Center P.O. Box 1487 Winston-Salem NC ThP25 TOTAL MICROWAVE SAMPLE PREPARATION FOR Gary Engelhart Milestone MLS 7289 Garden Road Suite 219 Riviera Beach FL 33404 ThP26 APPLICATIONS OF AUTOMATED MICROWAVE DIGESTION SYSTEM FOR ICP ANALYSIS. Sergei Leikin and Angelo Grillo Questron Corporation 4044 Quakerbridge Road Mercerville NJ 08619; Ramon M. Barnes Department of Chemistry LGRC Tower University of Massachusetts Amherst MA 01003-4510 ThP27 INNOVATIONS IN CLOSED VESSEL MICROWAVE SAMPLE PREPARATION.John Poling and Ben Moshiri Questron Corporation 4044 Quakerbridge Road Mercerville NJ 08619 ThP28 RAPID SAMPLE PREPARATION TECHNIQUES FOR ANALYSIS BY ICP AND ICP/MS. Ben Moshiri and John Poling Questron Corporation 4044 Quakerbridge Road Mercerville NJ 08619 ThP14 DETERMINATION OF THE SELF-ABSORPTION SUCCESSIVE MULTIPHOTONIC EXCITATION-PHOTO- ThP16 THE DETERMINATION OF NON-TRADITIONAL ThP18 METHODS FOR IMPROVING ICP-AES ANALYSIS OF ThP19 PHARMACOKINETIC STUDIES INTO CIS-DIAMMINE PLATINUM (11) DBP A NEWLY SYNTHESIZED TUMOR- MILK BY ICP-MS AND ICP-AES AFTER HIGH PRESSURE ThP21 MICROWAVE ASSISTED VAPOR-PHASE MTRIC ACID 27102-1487 ATOMIC SPECTROSCOPY-A SYSTEMATIC APPROACH. W. Glow Discharge Atomic and Mass Spectrometry SOURCE CHARACTERISTICS IN RADIO FREQUENCY GLOW DISCHARGE MASS SPECTROMETRY.Charles R. Shick Jr. and R. Kenneth Marcus Department of Chemistry Howard L. Hunter Chemical Laboratory Clemson University Clemson SC 29634-1905 TbP29a A SPECTRAL STUDY OF CHARGE TRANSFER IN GLOW DISCHARGES. Gary Horlick and Yuhui Zhao Department of Chemistry University of Alberta Edmonton AB T6G 2G2 Canada ThP29b EXCITATION AND EMISSION CHARACTERISTICS OF NEUTRAL ATOMS IN GLOW DISCHARGES WITH COMPARISONS TO INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMAS. Gary Horlick and Yuhui Zhao Department of Chemistry University of Alberta Edmonton AB T6G 2G2 Canada ThP29c NEUTRAL ATOM CONCENTRATION PROFILES IN A GLOW DISCHARGE OBSERVED BY CONCENTRATION MODULATED ABSORPTION SPECTROSCOPY.Rod S. Mason Ric M. Allott Pat Miller and W. Jeremy Jones Department of Chemistry University of Wales Swansea Singleton Park Swansea SA2 8PP United Kingdom ThP29d EFFECT OF ADDED GASES ON THE MASS SPECTRA FROM A FAST FLOW GDMS ION SOURCE. Rod S. Mason Pat Miller Department of Chemistry University of Wales Swansea Singleton Park Swansea SA2 8PP United Kingdom and Martin Liezers VG Elemental Winsford Cheshire United Kingdom ThP3O COMPARISON OF THE ATOMIZATION AND SECOND PULSE DISCHARGES. Kristofor Ingeneri Wei Hang and W. W. Harrison Department of Chemistry University of Florida Gainesville FL 3261 1 ThP31 TIME OF FLIGHT GLOW DISCHARGE MASS SPECTROMETRY. Wei Hang B. W. Smith J. D. Winefordner and W. W. Harrison Department of Chemistry University of Florida Gainesville FL 3261 1 ThP29 EFFECT OF DRIVING FREQUENCY (2-30 MHz) ON IONIZATION EFFICIENCIES OF DC RF AND MICRO- ThP32 CONTINUUM BACKGROUND REDUCTION IN TIME- OF-FLIGHT MASS SPECTROMETRY WITH CONTINUOUS ION SOURCES.Patrick P. Mahoney Steven J. Ray Gangqiang Li and Gary Hieftje Department of Chemistry Indiana University Bloomington IN 47405 ThP33 AN ION SOURCE FOR DIRECT ANALYSIS OF SOLUTIONS IN A GLOW DISCHARGE MASS SPECTROMETRY. George G. Sikarulidze and Alexander E. Lezhnev Institute of Microelectronics Technology an High Purity Materials Russian Academy of Sciences 142432 Chernogoloyka Moscow District Russia ThP34 EFFECTS OF LIMITING ORIFICE (ANODE) (GD) ANALYSIS BY LANGMUIR CURRENT AND VOLTAGE PROBES. Yuancai Ye and R. Kenneth Marcus Department of Chemistry Howard L.Hunter Chemical Laboratory Clemson University Clemson SC 29634-1905 ThP35 ELEMENTAL ANALYSIS OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS BY PARTICLE BEAM HOLLOW CATHODE GLOW DISCHARGE ATOMIC EMISSION SPECTROSCOPY. Jianzhang You Patrick A. DePalma Jr. and R. Kenneth Marcus Department of Chemistry Clemson University Clemson SC 29634- 1905 ThP36 DETERMINATION OF SIMULATED NUCLEAR WASTE METRY. Xiaohan Pan Tina R. Harville and R. Kenneth Marcus Department of Chemistry Clemson University Clemson SC 29634-1905 ThP37 STUDIES ON SINGLE PARTICLES BY GLOW DISCHARGE MASS SPECTROMETER. Maria Betti Institute for Transuranium Elements Joint Research Centre Commission of the European Communities Postfach 2340,76125 Karlsruhe Germany ThP38 TRACE CHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF Pd METAL POWDERS BY GLOW DISCHARGE MASS SPECTROMETRY.David M. Wayne CST-8 MS G-740 Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos NM 87545 ThP39 GLOW DISCHARGE ELEMENTAL QUANTIFICATION PRIMARY VS. SECONDARY SPECIES. K. L. Goodner J. R. Eyler Department of Chemistry P.O. Box 117200 Gainesville FL 3261 1-7200; C.M Barshick and D. H. Smith Chemical and Analytical Sciences Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge TN 3783 1-6375 ThP40 ISOTOPE RATIO ANALYSIS UTILIZING A GLOW DISCHARGE FOURIER TRANSFORM ION CYCLOTRON K. L. Goodner J. R. Eyler and C. H. Watson Department of Chemistry P.O. Box 117200 Gainesville FL 32611-7200; C.M Barshick and D. H. Smith Chemical and Analytical Sciences Oak Ridge National Laboratory Oak Ridge TN 37831-6375 GEOMETRIES ON AN ANALYTICAL RF-GLOW DISCHARGE BY GLOW DISCHARGE ATOMIC EMISSION SPECTRO- RESONANCE MASS SPECTROMETRY (GD-FTICR-MS).1996 Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry 3 January 8-13 1996ThP41 DEPENDENCE OF LINE INTENSITIES OF SELECTED V. Hoffmann F. Praessler and K. Wetzig IFW Dresden e.V. Postfach 270016 D-01171 Dresden Germany COATINGS BY RF AND DC GD-OES. F. Praessler V. Hoffmann K. Bartsch and K. Wetzig IFW Dresden e.V. Postfach 270016 D-01171 Dresden Germany ThP43 ANALYSIS OF C H 0 N BY GD/AES (RADIO FREQUENCY ATOMIC EMISSION SPECTROMETRY ). Pierre Marty CEA CEA Valduc BBt 778 IS/SUR/TILLE France ThP44 A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF MARINE SEDIMENTS FROM ANTARCTICA BY GD-AES AND ICP-MS. S. Caroli 0. Senofonte and S. Caimi Istituto Superiore di Sanita Viale Regina Elena 299,00161 Rome Italy ThP45 DIRECT ANALYSIS OF SOLID SAMPLES USING DC ARC CID SPECTROSCOPY.Cynthia A. Mahan Los Alamos National Laboratory Inorganic Trace Analysis MSG740 Los Alamos NM87545 ThP46 DESIGN AND OPTIMIZATION OF A LOW PRESSURE INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETER. Gavin OConnor Les Ebdon and E. Hywel Evans University of Plymouth Department of Environmental Sciences Drake Circus Plymouth PL4 8AA UK 4:30 TS1 Teaching Spectroscopy with Computers Vassili Karanassios Chairman ELEMENTS ON THE PLASMA PARAMETERS IN RF GD-OES. ThP42 QUANTITATIVE ANALYSIS OF CVD-MULTILAYER Friday January 12 19% 9. Plasma Source Emission/Mass Spectrometry Solid Samples Sergio Caroli Chairman ROO PL5 RADIO FREQUENCY GLOW DISCHARGE CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES FROM ALUMINUM TO ZEOLITES. R. Kenneth Marcus Department of Chemistry Howard L.Hunter Chemical Laboratory Clemson University Clemson SC 29634-1905 915 IL13 DEVELOPMENTS OF GLOW DISCHARGE OPTICAL EMISSION SPECTROMERY. Arne Bengtson Swedish Institute for Metals Research Drottning Kristinas vag 48 S-114 28 Stockholm Sweden 945 IL14 ELEMENTAL PLASMA SOURCE MASS SPECTROMETRY. W. W. Harrison and Wei Hang Department of Chemistry University of Florida Gainesville FL 3261 1 1015 F1 RELATIVE ION YIELDS IN GLOW DISCHARGE MASS SPECTROMETRY AN EXPLICIT APPROACH. Annemie Bogaerts and Renaat Gijbels Department of Chemistry University of Antwerp (UIA) Universiteitsplein 1 B-2610 Wilrijk-Antwerp Belgium 1035 F2 APPLICATION OF R.F. GDMS FOR TRACE AND DEPTH PROFILE ANALYSIS OF NONCONDUCTING SAMPLES. Ralf Nadolny Anatolij I. Saprykin* J. Sabine Becker Hans-Joachim Dietze JosC A.C. Broekaert** Zentralabteilung fur Chemische Analysen Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH D-52428 Julich Germany *On leave from the Institute of Inorganic Chemistry 630090 Novosibirsk Russia **Fachbereich Chemie Universitat Dortmund P.O. Box 500500 D-442277 Germany 1055 F3 ANALYSIS OF LAYERED MATERIALS UTILIZING A EMISSION SOURCE. Mark Parker and R. Kenneth Marcus Department of Chemistry Howard L. Hunter Chemical Laboratory Clemson University Clemson SC 29634-1905 11:15 F4 CRITICAL EVALUATION OF THE USE OF A D.C. GLOW DISCHARGE MASS SPECTROMETER FOR THE CHARACTERIZATION OF NUCLEAR SAMPLES. Maria Betti Institute for Transuranium Elements Joint Research Centre Commission of the European Communities Postfach 2340 76125 Karlsruhe Germany 11:35 F5 A NOVEL SAMPLE PREPARATION APPROACH FOR GLOW DISCHARGE MASS SPECTROMETRIC ANALYSIS OF ATMOSPHERIC PARTICULATE MATTER.Wim Schelles Kris Maes and RenC Van Grieken University of Antwerp (UIA) Department of Chemistry Universiteitsplein 1 B-2610 Antwerpen Belgium RADIO-FREQUENCY GLOW DISCHARGE ATOMIC 10. Plasma Source Mass Spectrometry Fundamentals Instrumentation Gary Horlick Chairman 1.M IL15 ICP-MS STATUS AND FUTURE. R. S. Houk Ames Laboratory- US Department of Energy Department of Chemistry Iowa State University Ames IA 5001 1 STATUS AND FUTURE VISION. David W. Koppenaal 1~30 IL16 PLASMA SOURCES AND ION TRAPS - PRESENT C. J. Barinaga and G. C. Eiden Pacific Northwest Laboratory PO Box 999 Richland WA 99352 200 F6 ION TRAJECTORY MODELING (INCLUDING SPACE CHARGE) OF THE ION DEPOSITION EXPERIMENT.Scott D. Tanner SCIEX" 71 Four Valley Drive Concord Ontario L4K 4V8 Canada and R. Sam Houk Iowa State University Ames Laboratory Department of Chemistry Ames IA 5001 1 220 F7 ULTRA-HIGH RESOLUTION ICP-MS. I<. E. Milgram C. H. Watson and J. R. Eyler Department of Chemistry P.O. Box 117200 Gainesville FL 32611-7200 240 FS QUADRUPOLE ION TRAPS WHAT DO THEY HOLD FOR GLOW DISCHARGE MASS SPECTROMETRY? Douglas C. Duckworth Christopher M. Barshick and Scott A. McLuckey Oak Ridge National Laboratory Chemical and Analytical Sciences Division P.O. Box 2008 Oak Ridge TN 37831-6375 300 F9 ELEMENTAL ISOTOPIC ANALYSIS OF ENVIRONMENTAL SAMPLES USING AN INDUCTIVELY (ICP-ITMS). C. I. Frum and K. Stezenbach University of Nevada Harry Reid Center for Environmental Studies Las Vegas NV 89154; R.Fields and B. Denton Department of Chemistry University of Arizona Tucson AZ 85721 COUPLED PLASMA-ION TRAP MASS SPECTROMETER Friday Poster Session Plasma Mass Spectrometry - Applications Fundamentals Instrumentation FP1 A COMPARISON OF ELECTROSPRAY AND ICP SOURCES FOR ELEMENTAL ANALYSIS WITH MASS SPECTROMETRIC DETECTION. Francine A. Byrdy Lisa K. Olson and Joseph A. Caruso Department of Chemistry P.O. Box 210172 University of Cincinnati Cincinnati OH 45221-0172 FP2 INVESTIGATION OF REDUCED PRESSURE INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY. Xiaomei Yan Tomakazu Tanaka and Hiroshi Kawaguchi Department of Materials Science and Engineering Nagoya University Nagoya 464-01 Japan FP3 FIGURES OF MERIT OF AN INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETER. Ohio Pereira De Oliveira Jr.Coordenadoria para Projetos Especiais Cidade Universitaria Armando Salles de Oliveira Avenida Lineu Prestes 2242 CEP 05508-900 Siio Paulo Brazil ; Jorge Eduardo De Souza Sarkis Instituto de Pesquisas EnergCticas e Nucleares Supervisiio de Caracterizaqao Quimica Cidade Universitiria Armando Salles de Oliveira Travessa R-N0400 CEP 05508-900 Siio Paulo Brazil OBSERVATIONS. Jonathan Batey Martin Liezers and Christopher Tye Fisons Instruments VG Elemental Ion Path Road Three Winsford Cheshire CW7 3BX England FP5 A COMPARISON OF TECHNIQUES FOR THE REDUCTION OF ArO INTERFERENCE IN ICP-MS. Stuart J. Georgitis Varian Instruments 7002 S. Revere Parkway Suite 81 Englewood CO 80112; Steven Anderson Varian Australia Pty Ltd.679 Springvale Road Mulgrave Victoria Australia 3 170; Michael Plantz Varian Instruments 201 Hansen Court Suite 108 Wood Dale IL 60191 FP6 A COMPARISON OF SENSITIVITY REDUCTION TECHNIQUES FOR ICP-MS ANALYSES. Michael R. Plantz Varian Instruments 201 Hansen Court Suite 108 Wood Dale IL 60191; Stuart Georgitis Varian Instruments 7002 S. Revere Parkway Suite 81 Englewood CO 80112 FP7 RAPID SCREENING FOR TRACE METALS IN BIOLOGICAL SAMPLES USING DIRECT INJECTION NEBULIZATION HIGH RESOLUTION ICP-MS. Dan R. Wiederin CETAC Technologies 5600 S. 42nd St. Omaha NE 68107 FPS SAMPLE INTRODUCTION BY DIRECT INJECTION NEBULIZATION IN HIGH RESOLUTION ICP-MS. Gregory Settembre and Steven A. Koch IBM Corp. D/350D Zip 40E Route 52 Hopewell Jct. NY 12533 FP9 OVERCOMING SPECTRAL INTERFERENCES IN THE DETERMINATION OF NG/LLEVELS OF PRECIOUS METALS CLEAN-UP.Jutta Begerowl Ulrich Greb' and Lothar Dunemann' 'Medizinisches Institut fiir Umwelthhygiene Department of Analytical Chemistry Auf 'm Hennekamp 50 D-40225 Dusseldorf Germany 'Finnigan MAT GmbH Barkhausenstr. 2 D-28 197 Bremen Germany FP4 CHARACTERIZATION OF NOISE IN ICP-MS SOME IN HUMAN BODY FLUIDS WITH HR-ICP-MS AND SAMPLE FPlO DETERMINATION OF SPECTRALLY AND NON- SPECTRALLY INTERFERED ULTRA-TRACE ELEMENTS IN BIOLOGICAL REFERENCE MATERIALS BY HIGH RESOLUTION ICP-MS. Hans Vanhoe Jorgen Riondato Luc Moens and Richard Dams Laboratory of Analytical Chemistry University of 1996 Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry 3 January 8-1 3 1996Ghent Institute for Nuclear Sciences Proeftuinstraat 86 B-9000 Ghent Belgium FPll DETERMINATION OF RARE EARTH ELEMENTS IN Panday J.S. Becker and H.-J. Dietze Zentralabteilung fur Chemische Analysen Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH D-52428 Julich Germany ELEMENTS IN THE DIRECT DETERMINATION OF THE REES IN GEOLOGICAL AND BIOLOGICAL SAMPLES USING THE ELAN 6000 ICP-MS. I. B. Brenner' I. Segal' S. Ehrlich' 0. Yofe' and 2. Goldbart3 'Geochemistry Division Geological Survey 30 Malkhe Israel Street Jerusalem Israel 95501 'Israel Antiquities Authority PO Box 586 Jerusalem 91004 Israel 3NRCN PO Box 9001 Beersheva Israel FP13 A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF TRACE ELEMENTS IN COW SHEEP AND GOAT MILK. S. Caroli A. Bocca and E. Coni Istituto Superiore di Sanita Viale Regina Elena 299,00161 Rome Italy FP14 THE ROLE OF CHIROCEPHALUSD~APHANUSFOR THE EARLY RECOGNITION OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION BY TRACE ELEMENTS.P. Pucci" S. Caimib G. Mura" and S. Carolib "Department of Animal and Human Biology University of Rome 'La Sapienza' Viale dell'universita 32 00185 Rome Italy bIstituto Superiore di Sanita Viale Regina Elena 299 00161 Rome Italy SERUM. Neil I. Ward Fadi R. Abou-Shakra and Margaret P. Rayman ICP-MS Facility Department of Chemistry University of Surrey Guildford Surrey GU2 5XH UK FP16 SAMPLE COLLECTION PROCEDURES FOR BLOOD SERUM ANALYSIS BY ICP-MS. Neil I. Ward and Fadi R. Abou- Shakra ICP-MS Facility Department of Chemistry University of Surrey Guildford Surrey GU2 5XH UK FP16a COLLECTION OF CAPILLARY WHOLE BLOOD ON FILTER PAPER AND SUBSEQUENT HEAVY METAL ANALYSIS BY ICP-MS.David Nixon and Thomas P. Moyer Metals Laboratory Division of Clinical Biochemistry and Immunology Mayo Clinic Rochester MN 55905 FP16b DETERMINATION OF MERCURY IN URINE AND BIOLOGICAL REFERENCE MATERIALS BY ICP-MS. V. K. FP12 INFLUENCE OF ALKALI AND ALKALI-EARTH FP15 SOURCES OF ERROR IN ICP-MS ANALYSIS OF BLOOD WHOLE BLOOD BY ICP-MS USING CONVENTIONAL CROSS- FLOW NEBULIZATION AND STANDARD UNTHERMO- STATED SPRAY CHAMBER. David Nixon and Thomas P. Moyer Metals Laboratory Division of Clinical Biochemistry and Immunology Mayo Clinic Rochester MN 55905 FP17 FINGERPRINTING OF WINES AFTER DIRECT MINATION OF RARE EARTH ELEMENTS. Sylvie Augneran Bernard Medina Laboratoire Regional de la Repression des Fraudes 33 405 Talence France; Joanna Szpunar and Ryszard Lobinski CNRS URA 348 Universite of Bordeaux I 33 405 Talence France FP18 PRECONCENTRATION AND INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRIC DETERMINATION OF LANTHANIDES IN NATURAL AND SEA WATERS.D. S. R. Murthy G. Chakrapani Atomic Minerals Division Department of Atomic Energy Nagarbhavi Bangalore- 560 072 India; T. R. Mahalingam Radiochemistry Laboratory IGCAR Kalpakkam-603 102 India FP18a MICROCOLUMN FIELD SAMPLING AND ICP MASS SPECTROMETRIC ANALYSIS OF SEAWATER. PART 1. ANALYTICAL PERFORMANCE. G. Woods and Cameron W. McLeod Centre for Analytical Sciences Department of Earth Scienes University of Sheffield Sheffield S3 7HP UK; B. Jones and R. Owens MAFF Fisheries Laboratories Rememberance Ave. Burnham-on- Crouch Essex CMO 8HA UK FP18b MICROCOLUMN FIELD SAMPLING AND ICP MASS SPECTROMETRIC ANALYSIS OF SEAWATER.PART 2. SURVEY OF UK WATERS. G. Woods and Cameron W. McLeod Centre for Analytical Sciences Department of Earth Scienes University of Sheffield Sheffield S3 7HP U K B. Jones and R. Owens MAFF Fisheries Laboratories Rememberance Ave. Burnham-on-Crouch Essex CMO 8HA UK FP19 DETERMINATION OF SILICON/ ALUMINIUM RATIO IN DRINKING WATER SUPPLIES BY LOW RESOLUTION ICP-MS. Denis BkruM and Denis Bralk Environmental Health Centre Health Canada Ottawa ON K1A OL2 Canada FP19a TRACE ELEMENTS DETERMINATION IN ANTARCTIC SNOW BY MEANS OF HR-ICP-MS. Carlo Barbante' Gabriele Capodaglio' Pier Renato Trincherini' Giuseppe Scarponil and Paolo Cescon' * Department of Environmental Sciences University of Venice 1-30123 Venice Italy; ' Environmental Institut Joint Research Centre 1-21020 Ispra (VA) Italy MICROCONCENTRIC NEBULIZATION ICP MS DETER- FP20 ROUTINELY SOLVING THE NON-ROUTINE PROBLEM.Christopher Tye David Gilmour and David Gregson Fisons Instruments VG Elemental Ion Path Road Three Winsford Cheshire CW7 3BX England FP21 OPTIMIZATION OF DATA ACQUISITION PARAMETERS FOR HIGH RESOLUTION ICP-MS. Nicola M. Reed Robert C. Hutton and Darren Mennie Fisons Instruments VG Elemental Ion Path Road Three Winsford Cheshire CW7 3BX England FP22 ENVIRONMENTAL CORRELATES OF TOOTH LEAD IN SOUTH KOREA. Chitra Amarasiriwardena Kim Rokho Nicola Lupoli and Howard Hu Channing Laboratory Harvard Medical School 180 Longwood Ave. Boston MA 02115; Kang Sinik Cho Youngsoo Park Kwangsik and Hyun Jaeman Nae-Woe Dental Clinic Kunpo City Kyung-Gi Do South Korea FP23 ASSESSMENT OF INTERNAL STANDARDS FOR ARSENIC IN ICP-MS. Thomas A.Hinners Spiros A. Pergantis and Edward M. Heithmar U.S. Environmental Protection Agency National Exposure Research Laboratory Characterization Research Division PO Box 93478 Las Vegas NV 89193-3478 FP24 LOS ALAMOS NATIONAL LABORATORY CENTER FOR DIRECT CHEMICAL ANALYSIS. Aaron Koskelo Debbie Figg Cynthia Mahan Dave Wayne and Debbie Thorton Los Alamos National Laboratory Chemical Science and Technology Division Center for Direct Chemical Analysis MS G740 Los Alamos National Laboratory Los Alamos NM 87545 FP25 ULTRA TRACE ANALYSIS OF SEMICONDUCTOR MATERIALS BY ICP-MS. Elzbieta (Ela) Bakowska Hewlett-Packard Company 2850 Centerville Rd. Wilmington DE 19808 FP25a DETERMINATION OF ELEMENT CONTENTS IN SINGLE AIRBORNE PARTICLES.C. Ludke Erwin Hoffmann and J. Skole Institut fur Spektrochemie und angewandte Spektroskopie (ISAS) Laboratorium fur spektroskopische Methoden der Umweltanalytik (LSMU) Rudower Chaussee 5 D-12484 Berlin Germany FP26 ANALYSIS OF A1203 CERAMIC POWDERS BY LOW AND HIGH RESOLUTION ICP-MS. Jo& Broekaert University of Dortmund Department of Chemistry D-44221 Dortmund Germany; Dagmar Pollmann Wolfgang Tittes Norbert Jakubowski Institut fur Spektrochemie und Angewandte Spektroskopie D-44221 Dortmund Germany FP27 DETAILED STUDY OF RARE EARTH ELEMENTS OF LAVAS FROM HAWAIIAN VOLCANOES USING ICP-MS. Lina C. Patino and Mark D. Feigenson Geological Sciences Department Rutgers the State University of New Jersey New Brunswick NJ 08903 HYDROGEOCHEMICAL EXPLORATION FOR BASE METAL AND GOLD DEPOSITS.Gwendy E. M. Hall Geological Survey of Canada 601 Booth St. Ottawa ON K1A OE8 Canada SELECTIVE LEACHES IN EXPLORATION AND ENVIRONMENTAL GEOCHEMISTRY. Gwendy E. M. Hall Judy Vaive and J. C. Pelchat Geological Survey of Canada 601 Booth St. Ottawa ON K1A OE8 Canada FP28 CAPABILITIES AND LIMITATIONS OF ICP-MS IN FP29 THE ROLE OF ICP-MS IN THE APPLICATION OF FP30 EFFECT OF THE MODIFICATION OF AN ION-LENS SYSTEM ON NON-SPECTROSCOPIC MATRIX INTER- FERENCES. Sandra L. Bonchin-Cleland Timothy J. Cleland Lisa K. Olson and Joseph A. Caruso Department of Chemistry PO Box 210172 University of Cincinnati Cincinnati OH 45221-0172 SYSTEM DETERMINATION OF TRACE ELEMENTS IN URANIUM.E. Debrah and E. R. Denoyer The Perkin-Elmer Corporation 50 Danbury Road Wilton CT 06897-0215 FP32 ION LENS-DEPENDENT ANOMALIES IN THE DETERMINATION OF BORON CONCENTRATIONS IN SAN JOACHIN SOIL REFERENCE MATERIAL. Richard J. Hughes and R. Douglas Evans Department of Environmental and Resource Studies Trent University Peterborough Ontario Canada K9J 7B8 FP33 A DETAILED STUDY OF THE QUADRUPOLE MASS ANALYZER OPERATING WITHIN THE FIRST SECOND AND THIRD (INTERMEDIATE) STABILITY REGIONS. Vladimir V. Titov Russian Federation Technical Physics and Automation Research Institute Warshavskoe Shosse 46 115230 Moscow Russia FP34 DETERMINATION OF ISOTOPE RATIOS FOR INDIVIDUAL MERCURY SPECIES. Brian Buckley Mark Heintz Wei Fang and Willie Johnson EOHSI-Busch Campus Rutgers University Piscataway NJ 08855-1 179 FP35 MERCURY DETERMINATION AT TRACE AND ULTRATRACE LEVEL USING COLD VAPOR GENERATION FP31 PRACTICAL BENEFITS OF A NOVEL ICP-MS LENS COUPLED TO HIGH RESOLUTION ICP-MS.K. Hoppstock J. S. 1996 Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry 3 January 8-1 3 1996Becker and H.-J. Dietze Zentralabteilung fur Chemische Analysen Forschungszentrum Jiilich GmbH D- 52428 Julich Germany FP36 PRECISE DETERMINATION OF METAL IMPURITIES IN SULFAMIC ACID BY ISOTOPE DILUTION METHOD COUPLED WITH ETV-ICP-MS. Naoko Nonose and Masaaki Kubota National Institute of Materials and Chemical Research 1-1 Higashi Tsukuba Ibaraki 305 Japan FP37 DETERMINATION OF TRACE TOXIC ELEMENTS IN RICE FLOUR BY ISOTOPE DILUTION INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY.Chang Joon Park Kyang Hang Cho and Jung Ki Suh Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science PO Box 102 Yusong Taejon 305-600 Korea FP37a A THEORETICAL ADAPTATION OF THE CLASSICAL ISOTOPE DILUTION TECHNIQUE FOR PRACTICAL ROUTINE ANALYTICAL DETERMINATIONS BY MEANS OF ICP-MS. H. Klinkenberg B. J. Kip and W. Van Borm DSM Research Dept. PAC-AN P.O. Box 18 NL-6160 MD Geleen The Netherlands RADIOACTIVE HALIDES USING HIGH RESOLUTION ICP-MS. W. KerI',2 K. Hoppstock' J. S. Becker' H.-J. Dietze' and W. Dannecker2 'Zentralabteilung fur Chemische Analysen Forschungszentrum Jiilich GmbH D-52428 Julich Germany 'Universitat Hamburg Martin-Luther-King-Platz 6 D-20146 Hamburg Germany ENVIRONMENTAL SAMPLES BY ICP-MS. Yasuyuki Muramatsu and Satoshi Yoshida National Institute of Radiological Sciences Isozaki 3609 Hitachinaka-shi Ibaraki 31 1-12 Japan FP40 CHRONOLOGY OF Pb ISOTOPE RATIOS IN BIOLOGICAL FLUIDS FROM A GUN-SHOT VICTIM.Sungling Yu Debbie Persuad and Gene S. Hall Department of Chemistry Rutgers the State University of New Jersey New Brunswick NJ 08903; Steven Marcus and Thelma Jennis New Jersey Poison Information and Education System 201 Lyons Ave. Newark NJ 071 12 FP41 ISOTOPIC STUDIES OF LEAD IN THE ENVIRONMENT NEAR PALMERTON PENNSYLVANIA. Michael E. Ketterer Mark P. Novotnak and Kenneth M. Humphries Department of Chemistry John Carroll University University Heights OH 44118; Joe H. Lowry and John Simon Jr. US EPS-NEIC PO Box 25227 Denver CO 80225 FP4la DETERMINATION OF IODINE IN FOOD AFTER WED ASHING BY ICP-MS. Erik H.Larsen and Stefan Sturup National Food Agency of Denmark Institute of Food Chemistry and Nutrition 19 M~zrrkh~zrj Bygade DK-2860 Sarborg Denmark FP42 MULTIELEMENTAL ANALYSIS OF ICE CUBES FROM FAST-FOOD RESTAURANTS USING ICP-MS. Gene S. Hall and Cesia Orquita Department of Chemistry Rutgers the State University of New Jersey New Brunswick NJ 08903 FP43 DETERMINATION OF TRACE ELEMENTS IN RADIOACTIVE AND TOXIC MATERIALS BY ICP-MS. Fabien Pilon Jean-Claude Birolleau and Sylviane Lafontan CEA-Centre DEtudes De Bruyeres Le Chatel BP 12 91680 Bruyeres Le Chatel France FP44 FISSION PRODUCTS AND ACTINIDES ANALYSIS BY ICP-MS AND TIMS. FrCdCric Chartier Jean-Claude Dubois and Mireille Pilier CEA Centre d'Etudes de SACLAY DCC/DPE/ SPEA/SAIS 91191 GYF SUR YVETTE Cedex France RADIUM THORIUM AND URANIUM IN A WASTE WATER BY WITH THE IRON (In) HYDROXIDE.Kazuyoshi Sushida and Kohichi Nakamura Inorganic Analysis Laboratory Toray Research Center Inc. 1-1 Sonoyama 1-Chome Otsu Shiga 520 Japan FP46 HIGH RESOLUTION ICP MASS SPECTROMETRY TRACES OF PLATINUM IN THE ENVIRONMENT. Frank Vanhaecke Dominque Verstraete Luc Moens and Richard Dams Laboratory of Analytical Chemistry University of Ghent Institute for Nuclear Sciences Proeftuinstraat 86 B-9000 Ghent Belgium APPLICATION TO VARIOUS SAMPLE MATRICES. Meike Hamester Ulrich Greb and Lothar Rottman Finnigan MAT GmbH Barkhausenstr. 2 D-28 197 Bremen Germany 530 PD4 SOLIDS ANALYSIS ALIVE OR DEAD? Isaac Brenner Chairman FP38 DETERMINATION OF STABLE AND LONG-LIVED FP39 DETERMINATION OF 1-127 AND 1-129 IN FP45 DETERMINATION OF ULTRA-TRACE AMOUNTS OF HIGH RESOLUTION ICP-MS AFTER COPRECIPITATION (HR-ICP-MS) FOR THE DETERMINATION OF ULTRA- FP47 ELEMENTAL TRACE ANALYSIS BY HR ICP-MS- Saturday January 13,19% 11.Plasma Source Mass Spectrometry Applications Conrad Grigoire Chairman 8:OO PL6 FUTURE PROSPECTS IN PLASMA SPECTRO- CHEMISTRY. Michael W. Blades University of British Columbia Department of Chemistry Vancouver BC V6T 121 Canada TIVELY COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY. James McLaren National Research Council of Canada M12 B12 Ottawa ON K 1 K OR6 Canada 9:45 IL18 ANALYSIS OF CERAMIC MATERIALS BY PLASMA OPTICAL AND PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY. Jose Broekaert University of Dortmund Department of Chemistry D-44221 Dortmund Germany CONTRACT ANALYTICAL LABORATORY. Ruth Hearn Ros Cox and Janice Haines Analytical Services Group B55 1 Harwell Didcot Oxon OX11 ORA UK; Nicola Reed Fisons Elemental Ion Path Road 3 Winsford CW7 3BX UK 1035 S2 ANALYSIS OF V Cr Mn AND As IN GOLD BY ICP-MS.Valentina V. Kogan and Michael W. Hinds Royal Canadian Mint 320 Sussex Dr. Ottawa Ontario K1A OG8 Canada 1055 S3 ANALYTICAL CHARACTERIZATION AND INSTRUMENT. Richard Dams Luc Moens Frank Vanhaecke and Jorgen Riondato Laboratory or Analytical Chemistry University of Ghent Institute for Nuclear Sciences Proeftuinstraat 86 B-9000 Ghent Belgium DETERMINATION OF 79Se AFTER HYDRIDE GENERATION. K. Hoppstock J. S. Becker and H.-J. Dietze Zentralabteilung fur Chemische Analysen Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH D-52428 Julich Germany RESOLUTION ICP-MS. Meike Hamester Lothar Rottman Ulrich Greb and Mechthild Haveresch-Kock Finnigan MAT GmbH Barkhausenstr.2 D-28197 Bremen Germany 915 IL17 ENVIRONMENTAL APPLICATIONS OF INDUC- 1015 S1 APPLICATIONS OF HIGH RESOLUTION ICP-MS IN A APPLICATION OF A HIGH RESOLUTION ICP-MS 11~15 S4 HIGH RESOLUTION ICP-MS USED FOR THE 1k35 S5 ANALYSIS OF ULTRAPURE CHEMICALS WITH HIGH- 12. Plasma Source Mass Spectrometry Stable Isotope Analysis MATERIALS. Claude Veillon Kristine Y. Patterson Human Nutrition Research Center U.S. Department of Agriculture Building 307 Room 226A Beltsville MD 20705 and Phylis B. Moser-Veillon Department of Nutrition and Food Science University of Maryland College Park MD 20742 NUTRITION. Peter Bratter Department of Trace Elements in Health and Nutrition Hahn-Meitner-Institut Berlin Glienicker Str. 100 D- 14109 Berlin Germany 200 S6 MEASUREMENT OF LITHIUM ISOTOPE RATIOS IN GEOLOGICAL MATERIALS BY INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY.D. Conrad GrCgoire Geological Survey of Canada 601 Booth St. Ottawa ON K1A OE8 Canada; Barbara M. Acheson and Richard P. Taylor Department of Earth Sciences Carleton University Col By Dr. Ottawa ON K1S 5B6 Canada 220 S7 ICP ISOTOPE RATIO MEASUREMENTS USING A HIGH RESOLUTION INSTRUMENT AN EVALUATION. F. Vanhaecke L. Moens and R. Dams Laboratory Analytical Chemistry University Gent Proeftuinstraat 86,9000 Gent Belgium; A. Held and Philip D. P. Taylor Institute for Reference Materials and Measurements European Commission-JRC B-2440 Geel Belgium 240 SS IRON ISOTOPE RATIO MEASUREMENTS IN BIOLOGICAL SAMPLES BY ICP/MS.Richard N. Kniseley Jr. and Robert E. Serfass Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition 1127 Human Nutritional Sciences Building Iowa State University Ames IA 5001 1 320 S9 ELECTRON SELF-EXCHANGE STUDIES OF Fe( III/II) AND Ni (III/II) REDOX COUPLES USING STABLE ISOTOPES AND ICPMS. Gary E. Kozerski Michael A. Fiorentino and Michael E. Ketterer Department of Chemistry John Carroll University University Heights OH 44118 PAINTS USING STABLE LEAD ISOTOPES AND MULTIELEMENTAL ANALYSES. Gene S. Hall Department of Chemistry Rutgers the State University of New Jersey New Brunswick NJ 08903; Michael Rabinowitz Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute Woods Hole MA 400 S11 LEAD ISOTOPIC RATIOS MEASUREMENTS BY SEDIMENT-CORES OF THE RIVER ELBE? Petra Krause and Andreas Prange GKSS Research Centre Geesthacht Institute of Physical and Chemical Analytics Max-Planck-Strape D-21502 Geesthacht Germany 1:OO IL19 STABLE ISOTOPE ICP-MS IN BIOLOGICAL 1~30 IL20 STABLE ISOTOPE ICP-MS IN HEALTH AND 340 S10 USE OF ICP-MS TO CHARACTERIZE LEAD-BASED ICP-MS A WAY TO FOLLOW THE POLLUTION HISTORY OF 1996 Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry 3 January 8-1 3 1996420 S12 URANIUM ISOTOPIC ANALYSIS BY USE OF Nucleares Supervis5o de Caracterizacao Quimica Cidade INDUCTIVELY COUPLED PLASMA MASS SPECTROMETRY Universitaria Armando Salles de Oliveira Travessa R-N0400 CEP TECHNIQUE.Olivio Pereira De Oliveira Jr. Coordenadoria para 05508-900 S2o Paulo Brazil Projetos Especiais Cidade Universitaria Armando Salles de Oliveira 440 PD5 GEOCHEMISTRY WITH PLASMA SOURCE MASS Avenida Lineu Prestes 2242 CEP 05508-900 S2o Paulo Brazil; Jorge SPECTROMETRY.Gwendy Hall Chair Eduardo De Souza Sarkis Instituto de Pesquisas Energeticas e 545 Conference Closing Royal Society of Chemistry Analytical Division Atomic Spectroscopy Group Eighth Biennial National Atomic Spectroscopy Symposium 8th BNASS University of East Anglia UK 17-20 July 1996 Plenary Lectunrs Invited Lecturers Call for Papers social Programme woricshop Further Details Dr S J Hill. Professor N Furuta. Professor F Adam Professor J M Mermct and Professor G Hiefije Dr 0 Donard. Dr S J Parry. Dr S Fairweather-Tait Dr A Ellis Dr A G Howard Dr J Brenner. Dr J Marshall Dr N J Miller-lhli Dr S Tanner and Professor D Littlcjohn Contributed oral and poster presentations on recent developments in both pure and applied atomic spectmscopy - analytical applications.theoretical studies or fundamental advances in AAS A S AFS. inorganic MS and XRF. Thret copies of abstracts must be submitted before 28 February 1996. BNASS has an enviable reputation of being a friendly and dynamic meting. A number of social events including a Symposium Dinner will form an integral part of thc meting. Immediately prior to the 8th BNASS them will be a Short Course on Sample Prc-treatment and Sample Introduction for Atomic Spectroscopy 17 July a.m. 1996. Ms Brenda Holliday Royal Society of Chemistry Thomas Graham House Science Park Milton Road Cambridge CB4 4WF. UK. Tel +44 (0)1223 420066; Fax +44 (0)1223 420247; E-mail JAAS@RSC.ORG 1996 Winter Conference on Plasma Spectrochemistry 3 January 8-13 1996Applied spectroscopy is the leading scientific journal in its field and the official publication of the Society for Applied Spectroscopy.Content includes peer-reviewed original contributions covering the theoiy and practice of all areas of spectroscopy in clud ing absorption emission fluorescence and scattering. In addition to optical spectroscopy x-ray NMR EPR microwave electron and mass spectrometry research are covered. Applied Spectroscopy is a tool for those who wish to remain informed of today's technology and research and a must for those providing quality resou rce mate ri a Is. APPLIED SPECTROSCOPY A MUST FOR ACADEMIC INDUSTRIAL AND GUVERNMENT INFORMNION. GET YOUR SUBSCRIPTION TODN! Number of Issues per Year 12 Frequency Monthly Months of Publication Jan.-Dec. ISSN 0003-7028 Applied Spectroscopy 201 B Broadway Street Frederick MD. 21 701-6501 Phone (301) 694-81 22 Fax (301) 694-6860 E-ma i I Ti naKsas@aol . com 1996 RATES Subscriptions are entered for the calendar year. D Subscript ion Surface $275.00 $31 5.00 $4.00 $250.00 Per Issue $ 25.00 $ 30.00 U.S.A. Canada & Mexico Aclent Discount Microfilm Other Countries Aaent Discount M ircrofil m Air Freight $355.00 $4.00 $300.00 Air Mail $390.00 $4.00 Per Issue $ 35.00 Advanced payment in U.S. Dollars drawn on a U.S. Bank is required. If your Business or University does not have a subscription to Applied Spectroscopy please encourage them to subscribe. The wealth of knowledge and the resources it provides can be shared with all coworkers and colleagues. Let us provide you with the tool to greater scientific awareness so you may achieve professional growth. Call fax or E-mail us at the numbers above or fill out the form below. 3 Yes we want a library subscription to Applied Spectroscopy! CHECK ENCLOSED NAME ADDRESS Pu b:Add2. Lib PHONE FAX:

 

点击下载:  PDF (2182KB)



返 回