
Flame Photometer
Multi-channel flame emission spectrophotometer for quantitative determination of alkali and alkaline earth metals with configurable element detection capabilities.
| Automation Level | semi-automated |
| BK-FP6430B | BK-FP6431B |
| BK-FP6432B | BK-FP6440B |
| Test Element | K/Na |
| K/Na/Li | K/Na/Ca |
| K/Na/Ba | K/Na/Li/Ca |
The ConductScience Flame Photometer is a multi-channel analytical instrument designed for quantitative determination of alkali and alkaline earth metals in biological and environmental samples. This flame emission spectrophotometer utilizes controlled flame atomization to excite metal ions, producing characteristic wavelength emissions for precise elemental analysis.
Available in 2-channel and 3-channel configurations, the instrument offers flexibility for laboratories requiring simultaneous analysis of potassium (K), sodium (Na), lithium (Li), calcium (Ca), and barium (Ba) combinations. The system provides detection limits suitable for clinical, environmental, and research applications where accurate metal ion quantification is critical for sample characterization and quality control protocols.
How It Works
Flame photometry operates on the principle of flame emission spectroscopy, where sample solutions are atomized in a controlled flame environment. The thermal energy of the flame excites metal electrons to higher energy states, and as these electrons return to ground state, they emit characteristic wavelengths of light specific to each element.
The instrument aspirates liquid samples into an air-fuel flame where atomization and excitation occur simultaneously. Emitted light passes through optical filters or monochromators that isolate specific wavelengths corresponding to target elements. Photodetectors measure emission intensity, which correlates directly with elemental concentration following Beer-Lambert principles.
Multi-channel configurations enable simultaneous detection of multiple elements by employing separate optical pathways and detectors for each target wavelength. This parallel analysis approach increases throughput while maintaining measurement precision across the analytical range.
Features & Benefits
Automation Level
- semi-automated
BK-FP6430B
- BK-FP6431B
BK-FP6432B
- BK-FP6440B
Test Element
- K/Na
K/Na/Li
- K/Na/Ca
K/Na/Ba
- K/Na/Li/Ca
Channel Qty.
- 2
3
- 4
LOD(ppm)
- K
≤0.156
- ≤0.156
Na
- 0.18~100
≤0.184
- ≤0.184
Li
- /
≤0.104
- /
/
- /
Brand
- ConductScience
Research Domain
- Analytical Chemistry
- Clinical Diagnostics
- Environmental Monitoring
- Food Science
- Metabolic Research
- Pharmaceutical QC
Weight
- 10.0 kg
Dimensions
- L: 43.7 mm
- W: 42.5 mm
- H: 31.0 mm
Comparison Guide
| Feature | This Product | Typical Alternative | Advantage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Detection Limit for Potassium | ≤0.156 ppm | Entry-level flame photometers often provide detection limits of 0.5-1.0 ppm | Lower detection limits enable analysis of more dilute samples without concentration steps, improving analytical efficiency. |
| Detection Limit for Sodium | ≤0.184 ppm | Basic models typically offer detection limits above 0.3 ppm | Enhanced sensitivity allows quantification in low-concentration biological and environmental matrices. |
| Channel Configuration Options | 2-channel and 3-channel systems with multiple element combinations | Many instruments offer fixed configurations with limited flexibility | Configurable options allow laboratories to optimize analytical capability for specific application requirements. |
| Element Coverage | K, Na, Li, Ca, Ba analysis capability | Basic models often limited to K/Na analysis only | Broader elemental coverage supports diverse analytical requirements without requiring additional instrumentation. |
| Compact Design | 43.7 × 42.5 × 31.0 cm footprint | Larger systems may require more bench space | Space-efficient design maximizes laboratory bench utilization while maintaining analytical performance. |
This flame photometer combines sensitive detection limits with flexible channel configurations for multi-element analysis. The compact design and configurable element combinations provide laboratories with scalable analytical capability for routine metal ion quantification in diverse sample matrices.
Practical Tips
Prepare calibration standards using the same acid matrix as your samples to minimize matrix effects and ensure accurate quantification.
Why: Matrix matching eliminates systematic bias that can occur when standards and samples have different chemical environments.
Clean the aspiration system with dilute acid after analyzing high-concentration samples to prevent carryover contamination.
Why: Residual sample matrix can cause positive bias in subsequent analyses and affect detection limit performance.
Allow adequate warm-up time for flame stabilization and verify baseline stability before beginning analytical sequences.
Why: Thermal equilibration ensures consistent atomization efficiency and reduces measurement variability across sample batches.
Check gas pressures and flow rates if flame characteristics appear unstable or emission intensity decreases unexpectedly.
Why: Proper gas flow ratios are critical for maintaining optimal flame temperature and atomization conditions.
Run duplicate analyses and control standards throughout analytical batches to monitor precision and detect systematic drift.
Why: Quality control samples provide real-time assessment of instrument performance and data reliability.
Install appropriate flame safety interlocks and ensure adequate ventilation in the analysis area before operating.
Why: Open flame operation requires proper safety measures to prevent accidents and maintain safe laboratory conditions.
Verify calibration linearity across the full analytical range and investigate non-linear responses that may indicate interference or instrumental issues.
Why: Linear calibration relationships ensure accurate quantification and indicate proper instrument performance.
Optimize aspiration rate to balance sensitivity and sample consumption based on your sample volume constraints.
Why: Proper aspiration rate maximizes analytical signal while conserving precious samples in volume-limited applications.
Setup Guide
What’s in the Box
- Flame photometer main unit
- Sample aspiration system (typical)
- Gas connection hardware (typical)
- Power cord and electronic connections (typical)
- User manual and calibration documentation (typical)
- Standard reference solutions for initial setup (typical)
Warranty
ConductScience provides a standard one-year manufacturer warranty covering instrument defects and technical support. Extended service contracts and calibration services are available for laboratories requiring ongoing maintenance and validation support.
Compliance
What sample preparation is required for flame photometry analysis?
Samples typically require dilution to bring analyte concentrations within the linear range and acid treatment to prevent interference. Matrix matching with standards is recommended for complex samples to minimize matrix effects.
How do I select the appropriate element configuration for my application?
Choose based on your target analytes: K/Na for basic electrolyte analysis, K/Na/Li for clinical applications, K/Na/Ca for environmental samples, or K/Na/Ba for specialized geological or industrial analysis.
What maintenance is required to maintain analytical performance?
Regular cleaning of the aspiration system, nebulizer maintenance, and optical component inspection are essential. Flame conditions should be optimized daily, and calibration verified with certified reference materials.
Can this instrument analyze solid samples directly?
No, flame photometry requires liquid samples. Solid samples must be digested or extracted into appropriate solution matrices before analysis.
What factors affect detection limits and measurement precision?
Flame stability, sample matrix composition, aspiration rate, and optical system alignment all influence analytical performance. Proper optimization of these parameters is critical for achieving specified detection limits.
How does this compare to atomic absorption spectroscopy for metal analysis?
Flame photometry offers simpler operation and lower cost for alkali metals but has higher detection limits than graphite furnace AAS. It excels for routine analysis of elements with strong emission lines like sodium and potassium.
What data output and documentation capabilities are available?
Consult product datasheet for specific data logging and export capabilities. Most flame photometers provide concentration readouts and basic statistical functions for quality control documentation.




