Publication detail
Analysis of Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy Data Acquired from the Boundary of Two Matrices
HOLUB, D. VRÁBEL, J. POŘÍZKA, P. KAISER, J.
English title
Analysis of Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy Data Acquired from the Boundary of Two Matrices
Type
journal article in Web of Science
Language
en
Original abstract
Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS) data obtained from the elemental imaging of heterogeneous samples are processed with various chemometric algorithms. The intention is to cluster obtained characteristic spectra and to provide additional information about the sample surface composition and distribution of individual matrices. However, there is a grey zone on the boundary of two matrices and the consequent clustering of the spectra obtained on this boundary is ambiguous. This paper focuses on the transition between two well defined matrices in a simplified case for a better transparency in data visualization. Steel and aluminum samples that are represented by characteristic spectra with significantly distinct structures (e.g., different number of spectral lines). Using a carefully designed experiment, several Fe:Al ratios were ablated and analyzed by Principal Component Analysis, Self-Organizing Maps and standard data metrics. This paper shows the strategy in discrimination of unrecognized spectra and possibilities in their clustering.
English abstract
Laser-Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy (LIBS) data obtained from the elemental imaging of heterogeneous samples are processed with various chemometric algorithms. The intention is to cluster obtained characteristic spectra and to provide additional information about the sample surface composition and distribution of individual matrices. However, there is a grey zone on the boundary of two matrices and the consequent clustering of the spectra obtained on this boundary is ambiguous. This paper focuses on the transition between two well defined matrices in a simplified case for a better transparency in data visualization. Steel and aluminum samples that are represented by characteristic spectra with significantly distinct structures (e.g., different number of spectral lines). Using a carefully designed experiment, several Fe:Al ratios were ablated and analyzed by Principal Component Analysis, Self-Organizing Maps and standard data metrics. This paper shows the strategy in discrimination of unrecognized spectra and possibilities in their clustering.
Keywords in English
chemometrics, clustering, elemental mapping, laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy
Released
01.08.2022
Publisher
SAGE journals
Location
Newbury Park, USA
ISSN
0003-7028
Volume
76
Number
8
Pages from–to
917–925
Pages count
9
BIBTEX
@article{BUT177367,
author="Daniel {Holub} and Jakub {Vrábel} and Pavel {Pořízka} and Jozef {Kaiser},
title="Analysis of Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy Data Acquired from the Boundary of Two Matrices",
year="2022",
volume="76",
number="8",
month="August",
pages="917--925",
publisher="SAGE journals",
address="Newbury Park, USA",
issn="0003-7028"
}