Detail publikačního výsledku

Development of a remote laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy system for investigation of calcified tissue samples

A. Hrdlička, L. Prokeš, A. Staňková, K. Novotný, A. Vitešníková, V. Kanický, V. Otruba, J. Kaiser, J. Novotný, R. Malina, K. Páleníková

Originální název

Development of a remote laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy system for investigation of calcified tissue samples

Anglický název

Development of a remote laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy system for investigation of calcified tissue samples

Druh

Článek recenzovaný mimo WoS a Scopus

Originální abstrakt

The development of a remote laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) setup with an off-axis Newtonian collection optics, Galilean-based focusing telescope, and a 532nm flattop laser beam source is presented. The device was tested at a 6m distance on a slice of bone to simulate its possible use in the field, e.g., during archaeological excavations. It is shown that this setup is sufficiently sensitive to both major (P, Mg) and minor elements (Na, Zn, Sr). The measured quantities of Mg, Zn, and Sr correspond to the values obtained by reference laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICPMS) measurements within an approximately 20% range of uncertainty. A single point calibration was performed by use of a bone meal standard . The radial element distribution is almost invariable by use of LA-ICP-MS, whereas the LIBS measurement showed a strong dependence on the sample porosity. Based on these results, this remote LIBS setup with a relatively large (350mm) collecting mirror is capable of semiquantitative analysis at the level of units of mg kg-1.

Anglický abstrakt

The development of a remote laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) setup with an off-axis Newtonian collection optics, Galilean-based focusing telescope, and a 532nm flattop laser beam source is presented. The device was tested at a 6m distance on a slice of bone to simulate its possible use in the field, e.g., during archaeological excavations. It is shown that this setup is sufficiently sensitive to both major (P, Mg) and minor elements (Na, Zn, Sr). The measured quantities of Mg, Zn, and Sr correspond to the values obtained by reference laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICPMS) measurements within an approximately 20% range of uncertainty. A single point calibration was performed by use of a bone meal standard . The radial element distribution is almost invariable by use of LA-ICP-MS, whereas the LIBS measurement showed a strong dependence on the sample porosity. Based on these results, this remote LIBS setup with a relatively large (350mm) collecting mirror is capable of semiquantitative analysis at the level of units of mg kg-1.

Klíčová slova

OCIS codes: 300.6365, 280.1545

Klíčová slova v angličtině

OCIS codes: 300.6365, 280.1545

Autoři

A. Hrdlička, L. Prokeš, A. Staňková, K. Novotný, A. Vitešníková, V. Kanický, V. Otruba, J. Kaiser, J. Novotný, R. Malina, K. Páleníková

Rok RIV

2011

Vydáno

03.02.2010

ISSN

0003-6935

Periodikum

Applied Optics

Svazek

49

Číslo

13

Stát

Spojené státy americké

Strany od

C16

Strany do

C20

Strany počet

5