The influence of a lack of sufficient electrical conductivity on the
results of quantitative electron probe microanalysis has been
investigated on a number of oxides. The effect of surface charging and
the way it alters the emitted X-ray signals has been studied. It is
shown that the presence of conducting coatings, such as carbon or
copper, will affect the interelement X-ray intensity ratios, whatever
the thickness of the coating may be. Although the effects for heavier
elements may be acceptable, they cannot be ignored for a light element
such as oxygen, where strong variations with coating thickness were
observed. Quantitative analyses of oxygen, on uncoated well-conducting
oxide specimens, using uncoated well-conducting hematite
(Fe2O3) as a standard yielded excellent results
in the range between 4 and 40 kV with the φ(ρz)
software used. As soon as coated nonconducting specimens were examined,
using the same hematite standard, coated under exactly the same
conditions, widely scattering and noncoherent results were obtained.
These discrepancies can only be attributed to a lack of
conductivity.