Micro-XRF as an analytical technique has a wide range of possible applications, but it is often considered to be most suitable for research labs and academic environments. This sentiment is needlessly restrictive – micro-XRF can be applied just as well across multiple stages of industrial processes.
For the materials testing of incoming goods - a task where bulk XRF is well-established - micro-XRF can go one step beyond precise quantitative analysis by also revealing component level alterations, be they accidental or intentional.
While true in-line analysis of products remains a very challenging task, investigating individual conspicuous components is another area of application. The origin of changed material properties like colour, wear or corrosion resistance may, for example, be traced back to the inclusion of foreign bodies that hint at wear of machinery in the production process.
For quality control, micro-XRF can assist by providing measures of layer thickness, composition, and the homogeneity of crystal structure orientation.
This webinar highlights how micro-XRF is a versatile and powerful technique suitable for use in various industrial processes, not just academic research. Examples that will be presented include the quality control of thin layer samples and foreign body identification in the manufacturing process of battery electrodes.
Falk Reinhardt
Senior Application Scientist micro-XRF, Bruker Nano Analytics
Dr. Christian Hirschle
Application Scientist XMA, Bruker Nano Analytics
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