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Checking phosphorus levels in an alloy via spectrometer

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Jerry66

Industrial
Apr 26, 2009
19
Is phosphorus levels hard to detect by a spectrometer and should the results vary, like from .001 to .003 on the same sample?
 
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1. What kind of alloy (steel, stainless steel, cast iron, etc.)?
2. What kind of spectrometer (be specific)?

One thing to keep in mind, P segregates in Fe/steel, so its local composition varies.
 
This is in NH41, An aluminum alloy for die casting.
 
I am assuming you mean an Optical Emission Spectrometer such as the PDA-7000 series from Shimadzu. As shown on page 6 of the .pdf file linked below (page 7 of the document), the range of P that can be detected in Al alloys is 0.001 to 0.02% by mass. When extremely small amounts of elements like P are present in Al, it is common to see some variation in the detected concentration at the lower limit. It is a common practice in indurtry to use a threshold of 0.005% by mass when reporting trace elements, meaning anything below 0.005% is reported as "< 0.005%" instead of 0.001 or 0.003, etc.

 
my spectrometer is a shimadza OES-55OOII,Thanks for yor reply on this you have been very helpful, Thank you.
 
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