Analytical Sciences


Abstract − Analytical Sciences, 21(12), 1401 (2005).

Mechanism of Volatile Hydride Formation and Their Atomization in Hydride Generation Atomic Absorption Spectrometry
A. RAMESH KUMAR* and P. RIYAZUDDIN**
*Chemical Laboratory, Central Ground Water Board, South Eastern Coastal Region, E1, Rajaji Bhavan, Besant Nager, Chennai 600090, India
**Department of Analytical Chemistry, University of Madras, Guindy Campus, Chennai 600025, India
The mechanism of volatile hydride generation (HG) and the formation of analyte atoms in the quartz cell atomizer used in the determination of hydride-forming elements (As, Bi, Ge, Pb, Sb, Sn, Te etc.) by atomic absorption spectrometry (AAS), have been critically reviewed. The nascent hydrogen mechanism failed to explain hydride generation under different experimental conditions when tetrahydroborate (THB), amineboreanes (AB) and cyanotrihydroborate (CBH) were used as reductants. Various experimental evidence suggested a non-nascent hydrogen mechanism, in which the transfer of hydrogen directly bonded to boron to an analyte takes place. In electrochemical hydride generation (EcHG), the reduction of the analyte species and subsequent hydrogenation was proposed. The mechanism of analyte atom formation in a quartz tube atomizer has been explained by the following hypotheses: thermal decomposition, oxidation by O2 and collisions by hydrogen free radicals. The free-radical mechanism satisfactorily explains most of the analytical implications. The significant variation in the experimental conditions required to generate different analyte hydrides makes it difficult to arrive at a generalized mechanism of hydride formation.