Thank you!! I appreciate the amount of dedication you put into researching just to answer my question
. One last query sorry haha, does the monochromator choose a specific wavelength? In my notes it says
"The wavelength selected is the one at the strongest intensity, because there will be a greater variety of intensities with different concentrations in the sample, and thus greater accuracy." Is this true?
It's fine, I'm revising for Chemistry myself.
Yes the monochromator separates the light into different wavelengths and selects a specific one.
I'm not 100% sure, but different concentrations and different substances do indeed have different wavelengths, so this may not be true for every substance.
If you take into account the emission spectrum, the wavelength of highest intensity would be when emission is strongest right?
Similarly the absorption spectrum would have the highest intensity wavelength at the point of highest absorption, therefore the highest intensity wavelength would show the extent of concentration as it shows how much has been absorbed by the flame.
If you look at both an emission and absorption spectrum, they'll match up. This is similar to how the lamp works, as it provides energy to an atom, the same amount of energy is released. This means that the same wavelengths/frequencies are released.
So therefore if absorption is the most intense at one wavelength, emission is the most intense at the same. Therefore the most intense emission wavelength i.e. the light beam would also give you the greatest point of absorption, which would be the wavelength that was mostly absorbed since they are the same atoms.
I'm not exactly sure what Shah is talking about for the "greater variety of intensities with different concentrations", as some versions of AAS simply place the metal in the fire. I think he's considering the sample to consist of other chemicals, so the lower intensity wavelengths would be of the contaminants and not the desired substance.