Course Description
The electron microprobe provides a complete micron-scale quantitative chemical analysis of inorganic solids. The method is nondestructive and utilizes characteristic X-rays excited by an electron beam, incident on a flat surface of the sample. This course provides an introduction to the theory of X-ray microanalysis by wavelength and energy dispersive spectrometry (WDS and EDS), ZAF matrix correction procedures and different imaging techniques including scanning backscattered electron (BE), scanning secondary electron (SE), scanning X-ray (by WDS or EDS, also known as compositional or elemental maps), and scanning cathodoluminescence (CL) imaging. Lab sessions involve hands-on use of the JEOL JXA-733 Superprobe.
Syllabus
Theory of X-ray Spectrometry
Instrumentation
Imaging Techniques
Quantitative Analysis
Recommended Textbook
Goldstein, J. I., D. E. Newbury, P. Echlin, D. C. Joy, A. D. Romig Jr., C. E., Lyman, C. Fiori, and E. Lifshin. Scanning Electron Microscopy and X-ray Microanalysis: A Text for Biologists, Material Scientists, and Geologists. 2nd ed. New York, NY: Plenum Press, 1992.
Other Books
Reed, S. J. B. Electron Microprobe Analysis and Scanning Electron Microscopy in Geology. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1996.
Scott, V. D., G. Love, and S. J. B. Reed. Quantitative Electron-Probe Microanalysis. 2nd ed. New York, NY: Ellis-Horwood, 1995.
Grading
The basis for the grade is completion of all the lab exercises (problem sets) and correctly solving problem 3B.