Development and application of laser ablation ICP-MS for the study of glass and its degradation

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dc.contributor.advisor Moretto, Ligia Maria it_IT
dc.contributor.author Panighello, Serena <1984> it_IT
dc.date.accessioned 2015-11-30 it_IT
dc.date.accessioned 2016-06-30T11:35:23Z
dc.date.available 2016-06-30T11:35:23Z
dc.date.issued 2016-02-23 it_IT
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10579/8341
dc.description.abstract The present PhD project aims to study a wide selection of glass artifacts from different periods, in order to obtain information on their chemical composition, to trace back their raw materials, to advance hypotheses on their geographic origin and technology and to investigate the phenomena of degradation. Among the various analytical techniques, LA-ICP-MS (laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry) seems to be ideally suited for the analysis of glass due to its high sensitivity (detection limits in the ng g-1 range for some elements) and large linear range (9-10 orders of magnitude), whereas very little or no sample preparation is necessary. Since LA-ICP-MS is a microanalytical technique for direct solid sampling of solid material (via a high-energy, pulsed laser beam of several µm to several hundreds of µm in size), it may be considered "quasi" non-destructive. The study is divided in different but complementary steps since several approaches are necessary to acquire a complete “picture” of the chemical composition of glass and the phenomena related to the degradation of glass. Laser ablation can be executed in different modes, i.e. ablation on a spot (drilling) or along a line (line scan or raster mode) for retrieval of multi-elemental concentrations in the bulk, depth profiles and elemental maps. Using various laser ablation modes spatial information (lateral resolution of several µm and depth resolution as low as 150 nm) could be obtained for up to ca. 60 (major, minor and trace) elements simultaneously. The laser ablation ICP-MS data can be combined with data from other analytical techniques, e.g. EPMA or UV-Vis spectroscopy, in order to obtain supplementary information related to the material. A selection of different archaeological, historical and artificially aged glasses were analysed by laser ablation ICP-MS (and other techniques) in order to obtain quantitative elemental bulk concentrations, depth profiles and 2D and 3D maps related to the different raw materials used for glass fabrication, glass degradation phenomena, heterogeneity, etc. it_IT
dc.language.iso en it_IT
dc.publisher Università Ca' Foscari Venezia it_IT
dc.rights © Serena Panighello, 2016 it_IT
dc.title Development and application of laser ablation ICP-MS for the study of glass and its degradation it_IT
dc.title.alternative it_IT
dc.type Doctoral Thesis it_IT
dc.degree.name Scienze chimiche it_IT
dc.degree.level Dottorato di ricerca it_IT
dc.degree.grantor Dipartimento di Scienze Molecolari e Nanosistemi it_IT
dc.description.academicyear 2014/2015, sessione 2014/2015 it_IT
dc.description.cycle 28 it_IT
dc.degree.coordinator Selva, Maurizio it_IT
dc.location.shelfmark D001589 it_IT
dc.location Venezia, Archivio Università Ca' Foscari, Tesi Dottorato it_IT
dc.rights.accessrights openAccess it_IT
dc.thesis.matricno 820253 it_IT
dc.format.pagenumber VIII, 171 p. : ill. it_IT
dc.subject.miur CHIM/01 CHIMICA ANALITICA it_IT
dc.description.note it_IT
dc.degree.discipline it_IT
dc.contributor.co-advisor Orsega, Emilio Francesco it_IT
dc.contributor.co-advisor Elteren, Johannes T. : van it_IT
dc.provenance.upload Serena Panighello (820253@stud.unive.it), 2015-11-30 it_IT
dc.provenance.plagiarycheck Ligia Maria Moretto (moretto@unive.it), 2016-01-19 it_IT


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