José Broekaert, University of Hamburg, Germany Matthieu Baudelet, University of Central Florida, USAĪnnemie Bogaerts, University of Antwerp, Belgium Ramon Barnes, University Research Institute for Analytical Chemistry, USA Marco Aurelio Zezzi Arruda, UNICAMP, Brazil Theoretical and numerical modelling of fundamental processes related to all of the above methodologies.Chemometrics, statistics, calibration techniques and internal standardisation.Single channel and multichannel simultaneous detection systems.Isotope ratio measurements, including techniques for improving precision and mass bias correction.Improvements in sensitivity, selectivity, precision, accuracy and/or robustness.Sample introduction techniques for solids, liquids, gases.New and existing sources for atomic emission, absorption, fluorescence and mass spectrometry and those that provide both atomic and molecular information.Submissions are welcome in the following areas, but note this list reflects the current scope and authors are strongly encouraged to contact the Editorial team if they believe that their work offers potentially new and emerging research relevant to the journal remit:
#Atomic society review full#
The journal welcomes full papers, communications, technical notes, critical and tutorial review articles, editorials, and comments, in addition to the Atomic Spectrometry Updates (ASU) literature reviews that are prepared by an expert panel. This includes, but is not restricted to, the most recent progress, developments and achievements in all forms of atomic and elemental detection, isotope ratio determination, molecular analysis, plasma-based analysis and X-ray techniques. The Journal of Analytical Atomic Spectrometry ( JAAS) is the central journal for publishing innovative research on fundamentals, instrumentation, and methods in the determination, speciation and isotopic analysis of (trace) elements within all fields of application.