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Development and calibration of a WDXRF routine applied to provenance studies on archaeological ceramics
Author(s) -
Georgakopoulou Myrto,
Hein Anno,
Müller Noémi S.,
Kiriatzi Evangelia
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
x‐ray spectrometry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.447
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1097-4539
pISSN - 0049-8246
DOI - 10.1002/xrs.2745
Subject(s) - comparability , calibration , sample (material) , provenance , repeatability , ceramic , certified reference materials , computer science , archaeology , sample preparation , neutron activation analysis , process engineering , environmental science , materials science , engineering , geology , mathematics , chemistry , statistics , geography , chromatography , detection limit , petrology , combinatorics , radiochemistry , composite material
Elemental analysis of ancient ceramics is primarily used in provenance research, where defined compositional groups are attributed to particular raw materials sources or production locations. Requirements in data quality and analytical performance are high, as is the need for clear and reproducible methodologies and the availability of information on the above to ensure interlaboratory comparability and long‐term data validity. This paper outlines the measurement parameters of a dedicated calibration set‐up for the analysis of ancient ceramics using wavelength‐dispersive X‐ray fluorescence spectrometry. The specimens are prepared as concentrated glass beads, allowing the measurement of 26 elements from a single sample, thus minimising sample size requirements. Certified and non‐commercial standards are used to evaluate the performance of the method in terms of detection limits, precision, repeatability and accuracy. The materials used cover a range of compositions in line with the matrix variability encountered in archaeological ceramics. The data confirm the high standard of the method and highlight specific limitations. An initial assessment of comparability with other set‐ups used in ceramic analyses, primarily neutron activation analysis, is given through a discussion of performance on commonly analysed materials. The advantages of the proposed method include excellent analytical performance, analysis of a large suite of elements including all major, minor and a good range of traces, relatively small sample sizes and preparation of samples that can be stored and reanalysed. Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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