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Using Fusion to Protect the Purity of Rare Earth Samples From Contamination
Fusion has become a critical tool for protecting the integrity of rare earth element (REE) samples, where even minor contamination in the sample matrix can influence analytical results. Much of this risk originates during sample preparation, when the material is most exposed to external interference. Common methods such as milling, acid digestion, and pellet pressing introduce variability through direct interaction with the sample. To remove these sources of uncertainty, fusion equipment converts the entire sample into a molten phase under controlled conditions, ensuring complete dissolution and forming a stable, homogeneous matrix for analysis.
The Contamination Risks of Traditional Methods
Traditional preparation techniques have long su
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Beyond the Crucibles: Using Thermogravimetric Analysis to Lock Sulfur and Halogens into XRF Beads
Lithium borate fusion is designed to simplify complex materials into uniform glass beads, but this homogenization can mask the behavior of volatile components. Sulfur and halogens often react differently under heat, transitioning out of the fusion environment before they can be incorporated into the melt. Such losses undermine the analytical value of the XRF bead. Thermogravimetric analysis (TGA) establishes a structured methodology for investigating these responses, enabling laboratories to characterize decomposition pathways and design fusion conditions that actively retain, or effectively lock, sulfur and halogens into the final glass matrix.
Using TGA to Map Decomposition and Mass Loss
TGA offers direct insight into the conditions under which volatile elements
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Managing XRF Spectrometer Calibration Drift in High-Volume Cement Production
In high-volume cement production, maintaining alignment between chemistry, process control, and throughput is critical to stable operation. X-ray fluorescence (XRF) supports such a balance by delivering continuous compositional insight, with XRF spectrometer calibration helping analytical results to remain accurate and comparable over time. This calibration state evolves under the influence of environmental variation and gradual component aging, leading to XRF spectrometer calibration drift and a measurable shift in instrument responses. Effective drift management is therefore central to sustaining process stability and consistent cement quality.
Why Drift Occurs: The Anatomy of Variability
Environmental Flux and Detector Sensitivity
Laboratory con
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