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GFAS

What Is GFAS (GFAAS)?

GFAS (Graphite Furnace Atomic Absorption Spectroscopy), also called GFAAS, is a trace elemental analysis technique used to measure specific metals at very low concentrations. It introduces a small volume of sample into a graphite furnace that heats through controlled steps (drying, ashing, atomization). A light beam at an element-specific wavelength passes through the atomized cloud, and the amount of light absorbed is used to quantify the target element.

GFAS is especially useful when you need high sensitivity for a limited set of elements, have small sample volume, or need a robust method for challenging matrices (project-dependent).

Key advantages

  • Excellent sensitivity for selected metals (element-dependent)

  • Very small sample requirement (µL-level injections, project-dependent)

  • Strong for targeted analysis when you don’t need a full multi-element panel

  • Controlled furnace steps help manage matrix interferences (project-dependent)

What GFAS Is Used For

GFAS is commonly used for targeted trace metals such as:

  • Pb, Cd, As, Se, Hg (Hg may use dedicated approaches; project-dependent)

  • Cu, Ni, Cr, Mn, Fe, Zn (as needed, element/matrix dependent)

  • Metals that are critical for regulatory compliance or product quality (project-dependent)

Typical goals include:

  • Compliance and spec support for targeted metals

  • Incoming QC of raw materials and process chemicals (project-dependent)

  • Contamination troubleshooting when a specific metal is suspected

  • Verification testing for disputes or third-party confirmation

Why GFAS (vs. ICP)?

Teams choose GFAS when:

  • Only a few elements matter (targeted list)

  • You need high sensitivity without running a full panel

  • Sample volume is limited, and digestion/dilution must be minimized (project-dependent)

  • The matrix benefits from furnace-based interference management

However:

  • GFAS is usually one element at a time, so it can be slower for large element lists.

  • For ultra-trace multi-element requirements, ICP-MS is often more efficient.

Sample Types We Support

GFAS can be applied to many sample types (project-dependent), including:

  • Water and aqueous solutions: process water, rinse water, extracts

  • Chemicals and formulations: acids, salts, cleaning products (matrix dependent)

  • Food and consumer-product extracts (project-dependent)

  • Environmental-style samples (project-dependent)

  • Digested solids: when solids require acid digestion prior to metals testing

Best practice: include a reference/control sample for “what changed?” comparisons.

Typical Workflows

Targeted Metals Panel (Most Common)

Best for: QC release, compliance, supplier qualification

  • Define target element list + required limits

  • Choose calibration and QC plan (standards, blanks, spikes—scope-dependent)

  • Report results with pass/fail vs your spec (if provided)

Single-Element Confirmation

Best for: suspected contamination (e.g., Pb or Cd excursion)

  • Rapid targeted confirmation at low levels

  • Optional repeat testing or matrix spike recovery (project-dependent)

Comparative Study (“What Changed?”)

Best for: supplier changes, process excursions

  • Run the same targeted list on reference vs suspect

  • Summarize deltas and likely significance

What You Receive

  • Results table with concentration, units, and reporting limits

  • QC notes (blanks, calibration, recoveries—scope-dependent)

  • Comparison summary (reference vs suspect) highlighting key differences

  • Practical conclusions and recommended next steps (when used for investigations)

Sample Submission Guidelines

Please provide

  • Sample matrix description and hazards (SDS)

  • Target elements and required limits/specs

  • Sample volume available and any preservation details (if applicable)

  • Lot/batch IDs and reason for testing (QC, compliance, troubleshooting)

  • Reference/control sample whenever possible

Typical sample amounts

  • Liquids: 10–50 mL (often sufficient for repeats/QC)

  • Solids: project-dependent (may require digestion; provide enough for prep and repeats)

Packaging tips

  • Use clean containers (trace-metal grade if possible)

  • Avoid metal caps/liners when trace metals are critical

  • Label clearly (reference vs suspect, sample point/time)

FAQs

Detection limits depend on the element and matrix. GFAS is generally very sensitive for many metals, but achievable limits are always matrix- and method-dependent.

GFAS is typically one element at a time, so multi-element requests are handled as a panel of separate measurements.

If you need a small list of metals and high sensitivity, GFAS can be a strong fit. If you need many elements or very low limits across a broad panel, ICP-MS is usually more efficient.

For water-based samples, often no. For solids and complex matrices, digestion or matrix preparation may be required (project-dependent).

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