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How to Eliminate the Matrix Effect in Borate Glass Beads for Battery Mineral Analysis
Reliable XRF analysis necessitates a stable and predictable matrix. In practice, however, lithium, copper, and rare earth element ores often contain complex mixtures of mineral phases and particle sizes that influence X-ray absorption behavior. This variability produces the matrix effect, where differences in chemistry, density, and geometry alter elemental signal intensity and introduce analytical uncertainty. Calibration models attempt to compensate for these distortions, but they cannot eliminate their physical causes. Laboratories can maintain a controlled matrix that supports consistent battery mineral analysis by converting powdered samples into homogeneous borate glass beads, providing a means of stabilizing X-ray interaction within the sample and reducing the matrix effect befor
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Copper at Scale: Reducing Calibration in High-Throughput Exploration Labs
Large copper drilling campaigns generate analytical workloads that only high-throughput laboratories can sustain. To process the thousands of prepared geological samples per day, laboratories rely heavily on X-ray fluorescence (XRF) systems, which provide the speed required for rapid resource delineation. Under continuous operation, XRF calibration stability is becoming increasingly difficult to maintain. As X-ray tubes age, excitation intensity gradually declines; X-ray detector response shifts with thermal cycling, and electronic components slowly modify signal amplification. Individually, each source of variation remains minor. Over extended analytical runs, however, their cumulative impact emerges when calibration drifts, progressively biasing copper measurements and introducing unc
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Pressed Pellets vs. Fusion Beads: Which Method Wins for Lower-Grade Deposit Optimization?
The transition to renewable energy, electric vehicles, and advanced electronics has intensified global reliance on lithium, copper, and rare earth elements (REEs). At the same time, declining head grades, complex mineralogy, variable gangue chemistry, and tighter capital discipline are compressing operating margins and increasing processing costs per tonne in new mine developments and expansion projects. Many new feasibility-stage and newly commissioned mining operations advancing lower-grade lithium, copper, and rare earth deposits now proceed at head grades of these target elements close to economic cut-off, where minor fluctuations in reported elemental concentrations can shift resource classification or recovery forecasts. High-quality elemental data generated by X-ray fluorescence
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