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Workflow

In situ X-Ray fluorescence analysis for the characterisation of materials on cultural heritage objects

X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy is a well-established method for the in situ investigation of archaeological objects and artworks through the characterization of the chemical (elemental) composition of materials. The fact that the method is essentially non-destructive makes it particularly attractive and widely used by heritage scientists, art historians, archaeologists, curators and conservators. The benefits of XRF include fast analysis, applicability to any type of object or composite material of various shapes and dimensions, suitability for the detection of major to trace elements and semi quantitative capabilities.

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Workflow steps(16)

  1. 1 Describe the artwork

  2. 2 Describe the project

  3. 3 Describe the method - Use (scope)

  4. 4 Describe the method. Operational environmental and safety conditions for the measurement

  5. 5 Describe the method - Equipment specifications

  6. 6 Describe the method. Measurement range, spot size and spatial resolution/ accuracy

  7. 7 Describe the method. Reference image (scale / multiscale / map / 2D / 3D)

  8. 8 Describe the measurement: Pre-processing/ safe limits

  9. 9 Describe the measurement. Pre-processing / selection and annotation of measurement sites on reference images

  10. 10 Describe measurement. Pre-processing / preliminary tests - Measurement setup

  11. 11 Describe measurement. Measurement / Spectra acquisition / Storage of data and metadata files

  12. 12 Post-process and interpret data. Peak / spectral bands assessment

  13. 13 Post-process and interpret data. Material identification/peak assignment

  14. 14 Disseminate the results. Data and metadata storage, publication and sharing

  15. 15 Disseminate the results. Prepare report

  16. 16 Disseminate the results. Publish the results

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The SSH Open Marketplace is maintained and will be further developed by three European Research Infrastructures - DARIAH, CLARIN and CESSDA - and their national partners. It was developed as part of the "Social Sciences and Humanities Open Cloud" SSHOC project, European Union's Horizon 2020 project call H2020-INFRAEOSC-04-2018, grant agreement #823782.

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