Multilayer targets PIXE spectra simulation (X,X) secondary fluorescence corrections algorithm
Abstract
Simulation of particle induced X-ray emission (PIXE) spectra is not a recent subject. Still, when samples are not homogeneous problems emerge even in the most simple case of layered samples. If it is necessary to consider the presence of the same chemical element in more than one physically distinct layer the number of available simulation codes is very small. In addition, although X-ray emission spectra from PIXE experiments are much less prone to significant secondary fluorescence issues than their X-ray Fluorescence Spectrometry (XRF) counterpart, cases emerge where secondary fluorescence calculations are necessary to assure good PIXE spectra simulations, even if corrections are small. The case of secondary fluorescence induced by primary X-rays in thick homogeneous samples was solved long ago by various authors. In the case of non-homogenous targets, the problem becomes much more complex and, although also addressed long ago, a general solution is not possible to find in standard access literature for the PIXE technique case. In the present work we revise a secondary fluorescence correction method presented in 1996 to handle homogeneous targets and extend it to be applicable to multilayered targets. Its implementation in the DT2 code allows to simulate PIXE spectra taking into account these type of matrix effects correction in complex multilayer targets. Fluorescence between different physical layers, the possibility of the presence of one chemical element in more than one layers, and the potential ”illusional” presence of a chemical element in a given layer due to the secondary fluorescence effects, when its real concentration in that layer is null, are dealt with. This is the first of what aims to be a series of three papers. In this part I work, the model is presented for the case of secondary X-rays induced by primary X-rays produced by particle collisions. Applications and potentially demanding experimental conditions will be dealt with in part II, and the case of secondary X-rays induced by non-radiative transitions primary radiation of fast electrons will be addressed in part III.