NITON XRF Analyzers

Performance Characteristic Sheet (PCS)

Lead Based Paint with NITON Analyzer

In 1994, NITON, now part of Thermo Fisher Scientific, introduced the XL-309, the first handheld XRF analyzer for lead-in-paint analysis. Followed by the NITON XLi and XLp 300 Series in 1998, they were the first lead analyzers to eliminate the need for substrate correction, and the first XRF analyzers without an inconclusive range. This superior performance is documented in all our Performance Characteristic Sheets, most recently in the September 24, 2004 edition.

Other lead-in-paint analyzers have tried to play catch-up yet still haven’t achieved our enviable status of no substrate correction and a threshold value of 1.0 mg/cm2 in all modes. The Thermo Scientific NITON XLi and XLp 300 Series XRF analyzers are the only instruments that report both K and L-shell results, making our users more productive, their results more accurate, and their inspections legally defensible.

Why settle for radioisotope sources that should be replaced every 9 months, or ineffectual x-ray tube devices that can’t do the job well enough to avoid paint chip analysis? The choice is obvious, NITON XLi and XLp: bringing the user the longest source life with 109Cd, while meeting the concept of ALARA – as low as reasonably achievable, the basic principle behind radiation safety – for safe, accurate, and reliable results, every time.

NITON XLp 300 PCS

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Product Literature