Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5112477 Journal of Archaeological Science: Reports 2017 12 Pages PDF
Abstract
SEM-EDS and XRF analyses of pellets produced with powdery clay and ceramic standards and fired at increasing temperatures showed a systematic overestimation of the abundance of heavier detected elements (K, Ca, Ti and Fe) using the conventional procedure of calibration with massive mineral/glass certified materials followed by normalization of the detected values. Errors were particularly noticeable for samples fired in the typical range of temperatures of archaeological and historical pottery (600-900 °C) and for unfired samples, and were attributed to material porosity. An extremely simple method based on the SEM-BSE image analysis is proposed for the semi-quantitative evaluation of porosity. A remarkable increase of accuracy, especially for SEM-EDS, was evidenced when the calibration is performed using a standard with porosity comparable to the samples, with regard to the pottery temperature range. Conversely, for the analysis of high-fired samples simulating porcelain (1200 °C) no substantial difference was observed with respect to the usual massive minerals/glass calibration. Finally, results showed the unsuitability of calibration performed by means of unfired pellets, for both pottery and porcelains.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities History
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