ABSTRACT Nominally identical samples can yield reproducibly different X‐ray spectra even under controlled preparation and instrumental conditions. These discrepancies are commonly attributed to counting statistics, matrix effects, or instrumental instability, yet such explanations do not fully account for systematic spectral variations observed across repeated measurements. This Perspective proposes a signal‐formation interpretation in which sample preparation introduces intrinsic response time scales associated with absorption equilibration, surface morphology, electrostatic charging, and thermal or structural relaxation. When these preparation‐dependent time scales are comparable to acquisition and detector integration windows, the measured spectrum represents a temporally averaged signal rather than a fully equilibrated steady‐state response. This time‐scale mismatch provides a physically grounded explanation for reproducibility limits, background distortions, and quantitative inconsistencies in XRF, SEM–EDX, EPMA, and related techniques. The framework integrates established phenomena from microanalysis and beam–matter interaction studies and is supported by publicly available fundamental‐parameter data. The contribution is interpretive rather than experimental, reframing sample preparation as a dynamic component of signal formation and clarifying constraints on reproducibility and quantification in X‐ray spectrometry.
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Abbas Alshehabi (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d896406c1944d70ce07973 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/xrs.70105
Abbas Alshehabi
X-Ray Spectrometry
Bahrain Polytechnic
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