Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

XAP, a program for deconvolution and analysis of complex X-ray spectra

January 1, 1989

The X-ray analysis program (XAP) is a spectral-deconvolution program written in BASIC and specifically designed to analyze complex spectra produced by energy-dispersive X-ray analytical systems (EDS). XAP compensates for spectrometer drift, utilizes digital filtering to remove background from spectra, and solves for element abundances by least-squares, multiple-regression analysis. Rather than base analyses on only a few channels, broad spectral regions of a sample are reconstructed from standard reference spectra. The effects of this approach are (1) elimination of tedious spectrometer adjustments, (2) removal of background independent of sample composition, and (3) automatic correction for peak overlaps. Although the program was written specifically to operate a KEVEX 7000 X-ray fluorescence analytical system, it could be adapted (with minor modifications) to analyze spectra produced by scanning electron microscopes, electron microprobes, and probes, and X-ray defractometer patterns obtained from whole-rock powders.

Publication Year 1989
Title XAP, a program for deconvolution and analysis of complex X-ray spectra
DOI 10.3133/ofr89338
Authors James E. Quick, Abdul Malik Haleby
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Open-File Report
Series Number 89-338
Index ID ofr89338
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse