No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2019
SUPERXAP (Super X-ray Analysis Program) enables IBM-compatible personal computers to analyze energy-dispersive spectra using least-squares spectral deconvolution. The program corrects for instrument drift, background, peak overlap, and matrix effects. Pull down menus provide 24 subroutines and functions, that allow spectra to be transferred, stored, viewed, manipulated, and analyzed. Spectral peaks can be identified manually or automatically with color-coded K, L or M lines. Working curves are developed using an interactive routine that creates standard files by least-squares fitting of peak intensities to known elemental abundances. Elemental abundances in unknowns may be determined in a variety of ways including on-line analysis of spectra as they are generated by an energy-dispersive detector and by batch analyses of spectra stored on disk. Standard deviation, based on counting statistics, is reported for each element in each analysis. Written in QuickBASIC 4.5 for interface with a KEVEX 7000 radioactive-source x-ray fluorescence analyzer, SUPERXAP could be adapted, with minor modification, to accept and analyze data from other instruments that produce energy-dispersive spectra.