Page 12 - Inorganic Mass Spectrometry : Fundamentals and Applications
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                                   by
                 Isotope ratio only de~r~nable the use of at feast one radioactive isotope
                Positive thermal ions preferably used

                Negative thema1 ions preferabiy used

               Elements amenable to thermal ionization, positive or negative. (From Ref. lo.)



       or other ion emitters, however, extends application to elements with high first
       *  nization potential (IP) and high volatility; for example, zinc (IP = 9.4 eV) has
        een successfully analyzed by using silica gel. Figure  1.1, taken from a recent
       review by Heurnann [lo], identifies for most elements which of the two ionization
       modes is preferable; it also identifies which elements are amenable to analysis
       using isotope dilution.





       The first observation of positive ions emitted from a salt on a heated surface was
       reported by Cehcke and ~eichenheim in 1906 [ 1 11. The method was first applied
       in mass spectrometry by Dempster in 191  8 [ 121. Kunsman performed pioneering
       studies of  the mechanism and of  means of  controlling ion production [13,14].
       Langmuir and Kingdon modified the Saha equation (which is applicable only to
       plasmas) to provide a theoretical understanding of the process in 1925 [ 151; this
       topic is treated in more detail later. As greater understanding of the process was
       achieved, various means of expanding application of the technique were devised.
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