ICP Analysis of Solids/Waste Slurries

The direct injection of solids/water slurries into an inductively coupled plasma (ICP) spectrometer offers a rapid and easy method for the analysis of major, minor, and trace elements in coal, coal ash, cements, and refractory materials. In this study aqueous slurries of 6 coals were prepared by mil...

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Main Author: Wang, Buqian
Format: Others
Published: TopSCHOLAR® 1994
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalcommons.wku.edu/theses/824
http://digitalcommons.wku.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1827&context=theses
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spelling ndltd-WKU-oai-digitalcommons.wku.edu-theses-18272013-01-08T18:58:37Z ICP Analysis of Solids/Waste Slurries Wang, Buqian The direct injection of solids/water slurries into an inductively coupled plasma (ICP) spectrometer offers a rapid and easy method for the analysis of major, minor, and trace elements in coal, coal ash, cements, and refractory materials. In this study aqueous slurries of 6 coals were prepared by milling with a stirred-ball slurry attritor mill and an air impact pulverizer. ICP analysis values obtained for the six coals by the two different grinding methods were compared. Five coal ashes and five check standard reference materials were ground by an attritor mill and analyzed with an ICP spectrometer. Slurries of standard reference materials prepared in the same manner were used to calibrate the spectrometer. The results indicate that the ICP method is poor for coal/water slurries. The recovery and analysis of major, minor, and trace elements in coal ash, slag, and refractory materials is good using the slurry ICP method. These results suggest that this method may be applicable for the analysis of finely divided solid samples using inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectrometry. 1994-07-01 text application/pdf http://digitalcommons.wku.edu/theses/824 http://digitalcommons.wku.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1827&context=theses Masters Theses & Specialist Projects TopSCHOLAR® Chemistry
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Chemistry
spellingShingle Chemistry
Wang, Buqian
ICP Analysis of Solids/Waste Slurries
description The direct injection of solids/water slurries into an inductively coupled plasma (ICP) spectrometer offers a rapid and easy method for the analysis of major, minor, and trace elements in coal, coal ash, cements, and refractory materials. In this study aqueous slurries of 6 coals were prepared by milling with a stirred-ball slurry attritor mill and an air impact pulverizer. ICP analysis values obtained for the six coals by the two different grinding methods were compared. Five coal ashes and five check standard reference materials were ground by an attritor mill and analyzed with an ICP spectrometer. Slurries of standard reference materials prepared in the same manner were used to calibrate the spectrometer. The results indicate that the ICP method is poor for coal/water slurries. The recovery and analysis of major, minor, and trace elements in coal ash, slag, and refractory materials is good using the slurry ICP method. These results suggest that this method may be applicable for the analysis of finely divided solid samples using inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectrometry.
author Wang, Buqian
author_facet Wang, Buqian
author_sort Wang, Buqian
title ICP Analysis of Solids/Waste Slurries
title_short ICP Analysis of Solids/Waste Slurries
title_full ICP Analysis of Solids/Waste Slurries
title_fullStr ICP Analysis of Solids/Waste Slurries
title_full_unstemmed ICP Analysis of Solids/Waste Slurries
title_sort icp analysis of solids/waste slurries
publisher TopSCHOLAR®
publishDate 1994
url http://digitalcommons.wku.edu/theses/824
http://digitalcommons.wku.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1827&context=theses
work_keys_str_mv AT wangbuqian icpanalysisofsolidswasteslurries
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