Precious sample analysis using a releasing-agent-free technique

Introduction 

Precious samples (e.g., extraterrestrial materials and archaeological artifacts), because of their extremely high value, irreplaceability, and limited sample mass, have driven continuous advances in X-ray fluorescence (XRF) technology, particularly in non-destructive or micro-destructive analytical capability, sensitivity, and spatial resolution. Consequently, analytical objectives have progressively expanded from major-element determination to the accurate quantification of minor and trace elements.

[Figure 1 AN260519-precious-sample-analysis-releasing-agent-free-technique.jpg] Figure 1 AN260519-precious-sample-analysis-releasing-agent-free-technique.jpg

Figure 1. Schematic illustration of the proposed swirling procedure.

For precious extraterrestrial samples, major elements are used to determine mineral composition, lithology, and chemical classification (e.g., meteorite classification), whereas trace elements provide critical insights into planetary evolution, parent-body differentiation, and shock metamorphism, enabling the extraction of high-value scientific information under non-destructive or micro-destructive conditions.

For archaeological ceramic samples, major elements are used to identify raw material provenance, firing technology, and glaze composition, while trace elements serve as “chemical fingerprints” for tracing clay sources, reconstructing trade and circulation pathways, restoring the original appearance of artifacts, and assisting in authenticity assessment.

Challenges

XRF analysis nevertheless offers significant advantages, including rapid analysis, non-destructive or micro-destructive measurement, simultaneous multi-element determination, minimal sample preparation, and suitability for micro-sampling and high-precision analysis of precious samples and archaeological ceramics.

Advantages

Despite these advantages, several analytical challenges remain, including the extremely limited sample mass, low detection sensitivity for light elements, matrix effects and mineral heterogeneity that compromise analytical accuracy, and difficulties in quantification due to the lack of matrix-matched standard reference materials.

Instrumentation and experimental conditions

Lithium borate glass discs were prepared using an M4 propane-fired automatic fluxer (Claisse, Quebec, Canada). The resulting fusion beads were analyzed using a wavelength-dispersive XRF spectrometer (AXIOS Minerals WD-XRF; Malvern Panalytical, Almelo, The Netherlands)(Table 1).

ElementLineCrystalCollimator (μm)DetectorTube filterX-ray tubeAngle (2θ)Counting Time (s)PHD*
kVmALineBg1**Bg2LL^UL†
Major
SiO2Si KαPE 002150FlowNone30120109.092.308--403172
TiO2Ti KαLiF 200300FlowNone409086.12–0.898--503664
Cr2O3 (Minor)Cr KαLiF 200300FlowNone409069.34–0.9670.938601360
Al2O3Al KαPE 002300FlowNone30120144.782.943--403169
TFeOFe KαLiF 200300FlowAl (200 μm)606057.51–0.9911.752401861
MnOMn KαLiF 200300FlowNone606062.96–0.9060.755501555
MgOMg KαPX1300FlowNone3012023.23–2.3302.420602873
CaOCa KαLiF 200150FlowNone30120113.071.672--503465
Na2ONa KαPX1700FlowNone3012028.07–2.0472.208603268
K2OK KαLiF 200300FlowNone30120136.66–1.0452.143503466
P2O5P KαGe 111300FlowNone30120141.14–1.9102.726603367
Trace
NiNi KαLiF 200150FlowAl (200 μm)606048.66–0.9380.928602060
ZrZr KαLiF 200150Scint.Al (200 μm)606022.50–0.8700.936503267
*PHD = pulse height distribution; **Bg = background; ^LL = lower limit; † UL = upper limit; Flow = gas flow proportional detector; Scint. = scintillation detector.

Table 1. Instrumental conditions for wavelength dispersive X-ray fluorescence spectrometry

Fusion bead preparation without a releasing agent

Eliminating the releasing agent represents not only a chemical optimization but also a precise regulation of the physical behavior of the molten fusion mixture. The research team recognized that the addition of a releasing agent excessively increased the fluidity of the lithium borate melt, causing uncontrolled spreading across the platinum mold and making bead formation difficult. By removing the releasing agent, an optimal balance between viscosity and fluidity was achieved.

Xue et al. further developed an improved operational procedure involving rapid manual rotation combined with in-situ cooling. This approach effectively resolved long-standing problems such as uneven bead thickness and poor bead formation, while also preventing thermal cracking associated with removing the mold from the fusion apparatus. Through meticulous control of these physical parameters, flat, homogeneous, and high-quality glass beads representative of the bulk-rock composition could still be successfully prepared from extremely small samples (~30 mg) at a sample-to-flux ratio of 1:100 (Figure 1).

Resolving spectral interference and improving analytical accuracy

In conventional fusion preparation methods, releasing agents such as NH₄Br are commonly added to facilitate bead release. However, this practice introduces bromine, whose Kα emission line significantly overlaps with the Kα line of Mn, thereby compromising the accurate determination of Mn concentrations.

To overcome this challenge, the research team adopted a releasing-agent-free approach, eliminating the source of spectral interference entirely and significantly improving Mn analytical accuracy (Figure 2).

[Figure 2 AN260519-precious-sample-analysis-releasing-agent-free-technique.jpg] Figure 2 AN260519-precious-sample-analysis-releasing-agent-free-technique.jpg

Figure 2. XRF pattern of Br Kα partially overlapping with that of Mn Kα. The blank glass sample and Mica-Fe glass sample with releasing agent, and the Mica-Fe glass sample without releasing agent were scanned by XRF between 61.0° and 63.7° for 188 s with a voltage and current of 60 kV and 60 mA, respectively.

Conclusion

For the invaluable lunar regolith samples returned by the Chang'e 5 mission and Chang'e 6 mission missions, the fundamental principle of analytical science is to achieve “minimal consumption with maximum information output.” By combining a releasing-agent-free fusion strategy with a high dilution ratio, this method enables efficient and synergistic acquisition of multiple categories of geochemical information from a single precious sample (Table 2).

This environmentally friendly, minimally destructive, and streamlined sample-preparation strategy not only provides reliable analytical data for current lunar research but also establishes a valuable “gold-standard” protocol for future deep-space exploration missions involving even more precious returned materials, such as Mars and asteroid samples.

CE6-C0000YJFM00102CE6-C0000YJFM00103
ElementMeanU**MeanU
XRF Major (m/m %)
SiO245.740.2845.830.29
TiO22.700.122.700.12
Al2O314.320.3814.370.39
Cr2O3 (minor element)0.250.040.250.04
TFeO17.240.5417.140.54
MnO0.2220.0100.2170.008
MgO7.080.317.000.30
CaO11.840.3711.950.37
Na2O0.280.030.230.03
K2O0.0730.0110.0790.013
P2O50.0720.0130.0680.013
Total99.82--99.84--
XRF Trace (µg/g)
Ni2603426132
Zr1171911514
*n is the number of replicates; **U is the expanded uncertainty calculated with an expansion factor of 2

Table 2. Elemental composition of the lunar soil samples CE6 (n=3*)

Related resources

Download the resources below to learn more:

  1. Tandem Elemental Analysis of Chang’e‑6 Lunar Soil Samples Using X‑ray Fluorescence and Femtosecond Laser Ablation Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry
  2. Quantitative verification of 1:100 diluted fused glass beads for X-ray fluorescence analysis of geological specimens