Langbeschreibung
Portable X-ray fluorescence (PXRF) instrumentation has some unique analytical capabilities for the in situ analysis of samples in the field. In this monograph, an overview is given of instrumentation, analytical capabilities, and limitations in the interpretation of results, sampling considerations and applications where PXRF offers substantial advantages over conventional analytical techniques. The aim is to give the reader an insight into the capabilities of the technique and to demonstrate the contribution it can make to a range of areas of contemporary scientific interest. Chapters are written by internationally recognised scientists with practical experience of in situ analysis using portable X-ray fluorescence. Portable X-ray Fluorescence Spectrometry: Capabilities for In Situ Analysis demonstrates the wide range of applications for the technique. Whilst many authors use commercially available instrumentation, applications such as the analysis of museum samples & works of art and extraterrestrial analysis demonstrate the ingenuity of the authors to develop and build equipment for specific studies. Sampling, quantification and correction procedures are presented to give the reader a comprehensive introduction to the capabilities of PXRF for in situ analysis. The book will be of interest to analytical scientists, environmental and geological scientists, industrial hygienists, industrial and plant scientists, archaeometrists and museum researchers, research scientists and students.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Chapter 1: Introduction, analytical instrumentation and application overview; Chapter 2: Quantification and correction procedures; Chapter 3: Contaminated land: sampling considerations; Chapter 4: Surfaces, coatings and paint; Chapter 5: Hazardous Substances in the Workplace; Chapter 6: Metal and alloy sorting; Chapter 7: Geochemical prospecting; Chapter 8: Archaeological lithic provenancing; Chapter 9: Museum samples and works of art; Chapter 10: Extraterrestrial Analysis : Planetary X-ray Fluorescence from Orbiting Spacecraft and Landers