ICPMS
More information
WebinarsAbout usContact usTerms of use
LabRulez s.r.o. All rights reserved. Content available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 Attribution-ShareAlike

Manganese ore analysis with the ARL OPTIM’X XRF Spectrometer

Applications | 2023 | Thermo Fisher ScientificInstrumentation
X-ray
Industries
Materials Testing, Energy & Chemicals
Manufacturer
Thermo Fisher Scientific

Summary

Importance of the Topic


Manganese ore composition directly affects downstream refining, alloy production and battery performance. Rapid and accurate ore characterization ensures optimal resource utilization, cost control and consistent material quality in industries such as stainless steel manufacturing and Li-ion battery cathode development.

Objectives and Study Overview


This application note demonstrates the use of the Thermo Scientific ARL OPTIM’X wavelength-dispersive XRF spectrometer to quantify major and minor oxides in manganese ore. The goal is to achieve reliable results in minutes, supporting high-throughput operations and economic ore grading.

Methodology and Instrumentation


Sample preparation and analysis were designed to minimize matrix effects and grain-size influence.
  • Instrument: ARL OPTIM’X WDXRF spectrometer with SmartGonio goniometer, covering elements from fluorine to americium without external cooling.
  • Power: 50 W version used for this study; 200 W option reduces acquisition time by 2.5×.
  • Sample prep: Fusion into glass beads using a 1:10 sample-to-flux ratio and ammonium nitrate oxidizer.
  • Acquisition: Twelve element channels were measured with kV and mA optimized per element; total counting time per sample was 8 minutes.
  • Calibration: Four certified manganese ore reference materials established calibration curves for oxides (Al₂O₃, BaO, CaO, Fe₂O₃, K₂O, MgO, MnO, Na₂O, SiO₂, TiO₂, P₂O₅, V₂O₅) over relevant concentration ranges with R² > 0.97 and SEE values below 0.3 %.

Key Results and Discussion


Calibration exhibited excellent linearity for major oxides (R² ≥ 0.995) and acceptable performance for trace oxides. Validation with two external CRMs showed differences within ±0.22 % for most oxides. Repeatability studies over ten replicates yielded standard deviations below 0.1 % for major components and highlighted the need for extended counting times to improve precision of low-level trace oxides.

Benefits and Practical Applications


The ARL OPTIM’X spectrometer offers:
  • High throughput: 8 minutes per analysis on 50 W, under 4 minutes on 200 W.
  • Non-destructive testing with minimal sample preparation.
  • Superior spectral resolution and stability compared to EDXRF.
  • Robust quantification of major and minor oxides with high accuracy and repeatability.

Future Trends and Applications


Advances may include:
  • Automated online ore characterization for real-time process control.
  • Integration with machine learning models for predictive quality assessment.
  • Enhanced trace element analysis via optimized counting strategies or hybrid pellet preparation.
  • Expansion to other critical minerals beyond manganese.

Conclusion


The ARL OPTIM’X WDXRF spectrometer delivers fast, accurate and repeatable analysis of manganese ore oxides. Its ease of use, minimal maintenance and high throughput make it well suited for mining, refining and battery materials quality control.

Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.

Downloadable PDF for viewing
 

Similar PDF

Toggle
Iron ore analysis with the ARL OPTIM’X XRF Spectrometer
Iron ore analysis with the ARL OPTIM’X XRF Spectrometer
2023|Thermo Fisher Scientific|Applications
Application note Iron ore analysis with the ARL OPTIM’X XRF Spectrometer Authors Introduction Didier Bonvin, The production of commercial iron relies on the refinement of iron ore, a massive Product Applications Manager XRF global undertaking; in 2021, 2.6 billion metric…
Key words
kcps, kcpscertified, certifiedintensity, intensityoxide, oxideppm, ppmiron, ironmno, mnoconcentration, concentrationsio, siomgo, mgotio, tiocao, caoarl, arlxrf, xrfoptim’x
Analysis of glass by X-ray fluorescence with the ARL OPTIM’X WD-XRF Spectrometer
Application note | 41708 X-ray fluorescencee Analysis of glass by X-ray fluorescence with the ARL OPTIM’X WD-XRF Spectrometer Keywords ARL OPTIM’X, glass, WDXRF, X-ray fluorescence Introduction The simplest form of glass is the single component fused silica (SiO2). However it…
Key words
fpc, fpcoptim’x, optim’xarl, arlppm, ppmpet, petpbo, pbozro, zrobao, baomno, mnosro, sromgo, mgotio, tiocao, caoxrf, xrfoxides
Analysis of nickel ore with the ARL OPTIM’X WDXRF Spectrometer
Application note Analysis of nickel ore with the ARL OPTIM’X WDXRF Spectrometer Introduction Analytical conditions Nickel is produced from two very different ores: lateritic and As shown in Table 1, spectra were collected from each nickel sulfidic. Lateritic ore is…
Key words
gonio, gonioxrf, xrfnio, niomno, mnozno, znomgo, mgocao, caoavg, avgwdxrf, wdxrfoptim’x, optim’xarl, arlspectrometer, spectrometerore, orecrm, crmdifference
Analysis of metallurgical slags: ARL OPTIM’X WDXRF Sequential-Simultaneous Configuration
APPLICATION NOTE No. AN41704 Analysis of metallurgical slags ARL OPTIM’X WDXRF Sequential-Simultaneous Configuration Key words ARL OPTIM’X, iron & steel, slags, X-Ray fluorescence Introduction Slags originate from various stages in the iron & steel process, e.g. blast furnace, converter, basic…
Key words
smartgonio, smartgonioslag, slagslags, slagsarl, arloptim’x, optim’xmno, mnofixed, fixedmgo, mgosio, siowdxrf, wdxrfcao, caoelements, elementspressed, pressedcounting, countingxrf
Other projects
GCMS
LCMS
Follow us
More information
WebinarsAbout usContact usTerms of use
LabRulez s.r.o. All rights reserved. Content available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 Attribution-ShareAlike