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Elemental Analyzers Compared: Combustion Analysis Vs. IGF
The difference between a high-performing alloy and a costly production failure can sometimes be measured in only a few parts per million. For laboratories responsible for material verification, identifying these subtle chemical variations is a routine necessity, not a specialized task. The need for accurate trace-element determination has made elemental analyzers indispensable across industrial and research testing facilities, with combustion analysis and Inert Gas Fusion (IGF) standing as trusted solutions for accurate elemental measurement.
Combustion Analysis
Combustion analysis is used to quantify carbon and sulfur in inorganic materials. During testing, a sample enters a high-purity oxygen atmosphere and is subjected to intense heat, triggeri
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Adapting XRF Sample Preparation for Green Steel Production
Green steel production promises lower emissions, but it also introduces a more unpredictable analytical environment. Scrap variability, hydrogen reduction chemistry, and evolving slag compositions generate conditions where small material differences can produce large analytical deviations. In many laboratories, this is exposing the limitations of conventional X-ray fluorescence (XRF) sample preparation methods and accelerating the adoption of fusion-based workflows designed to improve repeatability across highly variable sample matrices.
How Green Steel Production Alters Sample Chemistry
Traditional ironmaking relies on relatively stable ore streams with predictable mineralogy and chemistry. Green steel production changes those conditions considerably. Hydr
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Hidden Variables: Eliminating Sample-to-Flux Ratio Errors in High-Volume Mineral Labs
High-throughput mineral laboratories operate under relentless pressure to deliver accurate analytical data at speed. Exploration programs, process control systems, and commercial assay operations all depend on reproducible fused bead preparation. Small variations in the sample-to-flux ratio remain a persistent challenge during X-ray fluorescence (XRF) analysis, often destabilizing both bead chemistry and calibration performance. When sample preparation consistency declines, laboratories face rising rework rates, calibration drift, and interruptions that lower overall throughput efficiency.
The Technical Importance of the Sample-to-Flux Ratio
The sample-to-flux ratio determines how well a mineral sample dissolves into the borate matrix throughout t
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