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Journal ArticleDOI

Laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS), part II: review of instrumental and methodological approaches to material analysis and applications to different fields.

David W. Hahn, +1 more
- 01 Apr 2012 - 
- Vol. 66, Iss: 4, pp 347-419
TLDR
The current state-of-the-art of analytical LIBS is summarized, providing a contemporary snapshot of LIBS applications, and highlighting new directions in laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy, such as novel approaches, instrumental developments, and advanced use of chemometric tools are discussed.
Abstract
The first part of this two-part review focused on the fundamental and diagnostics aspects of laser-induced plasmas, only touching briefly upon concepts such as sensitivity and detection limits and largely omitting any discussion of the vast panorama of the practical applications of the technique. Clearly a true LIBS community has emerged, which promises to quicken the pace of LIBS developments, applications, and implementations. With this second part, a more applied flavor is taken, and its intended goal is summarizing the current state-of-the-art of analytical LIBS, providing a contemporary snapshot of LIBS applications, and highlighting new directions in laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy, such as novel approaches, instrumental developments, and advanced use of chemometric tools. More specifically, we discuss instrumental and analytical approaches (e.g., double- and multi-pulse LIBS to improve the sensitivity), calibration-free approaches, hyphenated approaches in which techniques such as Raman and fluorescence are coupled with LIBS to increase sensitivity and information power, resonantly enhanced LIBS approaches, signal processing and optimization (e.g., signal-to-noise analysis), and finally applications. An attempt is made to provide an updated view of the role played by LIBS in the various fields, with emphasis on applications considered to be unique. We finally try to assess where LIBS is going as an analytical field, where in our opinion it should go, and what should still be done for consolidating the technique as a mature method of chemical analysis.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy.

TL;DR: Compared to the conventional flame emission spectroscopy, LIBS atomizes only the small portion of the sample by the focused laser pulse, which makes a tiny spark on the sample, and capturing the instant light is a major skill to collect sufficient intensity of the emitting species.
Journal ArticleDOI

Near infrared spectroscopy: A mature analytical technique with new perspectives - A review.

TL;DR: Last decade's advances and modern aspects of near infrared spectroscopy are critically examined and reviewed in order to understand why the technique has found intensive application in the most diverse and modern areas of analytical importance during the last ten years.
Journal ArticleDOI

Laser ablation in analytical chemistry.

TL;DR: Current issues in fundamental research, applications based on detecting photons at the ablation site and by collecting particles for excitation in a secondary source (ICP), and directions for the technology are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Good practices in LIBS analysis: Review and advices

TL;DR: In this article, a review on the analytical results obtained by laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) is presented, including the risk of misclassification, and results on concentration measurement based on calibration are accompanied with significant figures of merit including the concept of accuracy.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Radiation from asymmetric laser-induced plasmas collected by a lens or optical fiber

TL;DR: A method of calculating radiation spectra of an asymmetric (ellipsoidal) laser-induced plasma plume for two cases, when the radiation is collected by a lens and by an optical fiber, incorporates the solution of the radiative transfer equation along the line of sight.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimation of confidence intervals for radial emissivity and optimization of data treatment techniques in Abel inversion

TL;DR: In this article, a method for finding confidence intervals for radially resolved emissivity derived from Abel inversion is described, where the measured lateral emission profile (here a profile is defined as a line-of-sight spatial map) is split into two components, namely (a) an estimated noise-free lateral profile that mimics the emission profile in the absence of measurement noise and (b) a noise profile that estimates the magnitude of noise along the lateral profile through random-number generation, noise with a magnitude defined by the noise profile is then artificially added to the estimated
Posted Content

Laser Beam Profile Influence on LIBS Analytical Capabilities: Single vs. Multimode Beam

TL;DR: In this article, a comparison of Gaussian and multimode laser beams with equal energy was carried out in order to estimate influence of beam profile only, and it was found that multimode beam sampling was strongly influenced by surface effects (impurities, defects etc.).
Journal ArticleDOI

Abel inversion applied to a transient laser induced plasma: implications from plasma modeling

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of non-uniformity, non-transparency, and non-stationarity of a laser-induced plasma on the results obtained by the Abel inversion method are tested.
Journal ArticleDOI

Laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy in gases using ungated detection in combination with polarization filtering and online background correction

TL;DR: In this paper, a diagnostic approach based on laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) is presented, which enables sufficient suppression of elastically scattered light which otherwise reduces the dynamic range of the measurement.
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