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- Dec 18, 2019
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Surprisingly - I made it all the way though your epic xrf thread. It was continues to be interesting, so keep it up!We have considered the sources facing forward, so easier to make geometry. It is wasteful of radiation we need just getting absorbed in shielding. The angled irradiation increases the number of hits. This is a back-scatter scheme. The higher energy gamma rays enters the sample, and some of then get lucky and hit an atom of sample. That hit makes it "glow x-rays". Of the X-rays generated, going all over the place, some fraction are in the direction of the detector.
Multiple use? We do hope so! If we get it really low cost, and it works, some HM members might want to get one together. If they can machine their own somehow, all we need distribute is the drawing.
As for multiple use, I was merely thinking that lost wax is destructive of the positive. So a better idea would be to make a silicone rubber mold of the wax item that you laboriously machined. Once you get the mold one can make as many positives as one wants. The mold could be aluminum with some minor changes.
My comment on the pockets for the sources is to have them come in a plane, rather than normal to the concave surface. That way the mold can be removed without damaging the wax. Actually, if the pockets are normal to the planar back surface, you could forgo lost wax and just machine a mold straight from aluminum. That would be the way to make a lot of them.