Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1241114 Spectrochimica Acta Part B: Atomic Spectroscopy 2008 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

In this paper Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy has been applied for determining the elemental composition of a set of ancient bronze artworks coming from archaeological site of Minervino Murge — Southern of Italy (dated around VII b.C.). Before carrying on the analysis of the archaeological samples, the characterization of the analytical technique has been accomplished by investigating the trueness of the typical assumptions adopted in LIBS, such as Local Thermodynamic Equilibrium, congruent ablation and plasma homogeneity. With this purpose, two different laser pulse durations, 7 ns and 350 fs, have been used. We have focused our attention on LIBS analysis of bronze standards by considering and discussing the bases of both methodology and analytical approach to be followed for the analysis of ancient copper-based-alloy samples. Unexpectedly, regardless from the laser pulse duration, the LIBS technique has shown, by considering an adequate approach on the emitting plasma features, that its peculiarities are anyway preserved so that a fast analysis of ancient copper-based-alloys can be achieved. After verifying the suitability of the methodology, it has been possible to fulfill the typical assumptions considered for the LIBS calibration curves method and use it for ancient bronze artworks analysis.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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