A signal loss is generally reported in electron probe microanalysis
(EPMA) of porous, highly divided materials like heterogeneous
catalysts. The hypothesis generally proposed to explain this signal
loss refers to porosity, roughness, energy losses at interfaces, or
charging effects. In this work we investigate by Monte Carlo simulation
all these physical effects and compare the simulated results with
measurements obtained on a mesoporous alumina. A program using the
PENELOPE package and taking into account these four physical phenomena
has been written. Simulation results show clearly that neither porosity
nor roughness, nor specific energy losses at interfaces, nor charging
effects are responsible for the observed signal loss. Measurements
performed with analysis of carbon and oxygen lead to a correct total of
concentration. The signal loss is thus explained by a composition
effect due to a carbon contamination brought by the sample preparation
and to a lesser extent by a stoichiometry of the porous alumina
different from a massive alumina. For this kind of high specific
surface porous sample, a little surface contamination layer becomes an
important volume contamination that can produce large quantification
errors if the contaminant is not analyzed.