Tribogenics introduces portable aluminium grade identifier for use in the scrap metal industry
18-Jan-2016
Tribogenics Press Release
Los Angeles-based Tribogenics, a manufacturer of portable XRF (X-ray fluorescence) analyzers for metal alloy identification, has added high-speed, high-precision aluminium alloy identification to the software library for its Watson analyzer. The company says in field tests with scrap recycling customers, Watson cuts XRF test times for aluminium alloy identification in half with almost 100 percent accuracy.
At $9,999 Watson is four times cheaper than LIBS (laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy) units typically priced at $40,000 and 2.5 times cheaper than competing hand-held XRF devices typically priced north of $25,000, Tribogenics says, making the technology well-suited to small and midsized recyclers.
“Improved light element ID, better software and improved usability have been identified as major pain points for users of hand-held XRF analyzers,” says Stewart Chalmers, head of marketing for Tribogenics. “Watson overcomes these challenges, offering customers a superior solution in terms of price, speed and accuracy for aluminium grade ID.”
For machinists and aluminium fabricators: Watson makes sure the right aluminium alloy is being used thereby providing facbricators with an affordable solution for ensuring the parts to be delivered are to the specifications.
For scrap metal recyclers: Watson quickly identifies a broad range of valuable metal alloys, including of course, aluminium alloys amid a variety of scrap.
Tribogenics launched the first commercial Watson hand-held XRF devices this summer. Conventional XRF devices use technology that relies on high-voltage transformers and X-ray tubes to produce X-rays. Working with physicists at UCLA, Tribogenics new technology uses a process similar to static electricity (known as the triboelectric effect) to generate X-rays, the company says. Key to the new technology’s success are the industry’s first replaceable, interchangeable X-ray sources that function much like inkjet cartridges, according to Tribogenics.
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