Latest News
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
...
Why Precision Calibration of XRF Lab Equipment is Critical for Battery-Grade Purity Standards
Battery-grade materials are defined by strict purity thresholds, but compliance on paper does not always reflect true composition. Lithium compounds may meet specification limits while still containing trace elements such as iron or copper at parts-per-million levels. Identifying these hidden contaminants requires precise analytical control. X-ray fluorescence (XRF) is widely used to quantify trace elements, however it does not measure absolute composition directly. The reliability of XRF lab equipment therefore depends on calibration.
Eliminating Mineralogical Interference via Calibrated Fusion
Raw battery materials rarely behave like ideal analytical samples. Variations in particle size, crystallinity, and mineral composition generate inconsistenc
...
How to Eliminate the Matrix Effect in Borate Glass Beads for Battery Mineral Analysis
Reliable XRF analysis necessitates a stable and predictable matrix. In practice, however, lithium, copper, and rare earth element ores often contain complex mixtures of mineral phases and particle sizes that influence X-ray absorption behavior. This variability produces the matrix effect, where differences in chemistry, density, and geometry alter elemental signal intensity and introduce analytical uncertainty. Calibration models attempt to compensate for these distortions, but they cannot eliminate their physical causes. Laboratories can maintain a controlled matrix that supports consistent battery mineral analysis by converting powdered samples into homogeneous borate glass beads, providing a means of stabilizing X-ray interaction within the sample and reducing the matrix effect befor
...









