Hi Ivan, I hate to rain on the parade, but you'd have to count me out. While I have access to XRF, LA-ICPMS, SIMS, XRD and a variety of other instruments, including electron microscopes capable of doing SEM-EDX, I would be forced to decline any offer to work on WTC dust samples. For us, the questions are time, money, novelty, and merit, and this project satisfies none of those requirements. For the benefit of non-scientists (i.e. Truthers), this is a conversation that I had with my supervisor in 2009, shortly after the Harrit paper was published.
Me: I would like to run an analysis of the WTC dust
Boss (PhD Physicist with 20+ years of research in thermodynamics, heat transfer, DSC, etc): Why? RJ Lee already did that.
Me: Because an obscure group of researchers practicing far outside of their field of expertise managed to publish a paper in an non peer-reviewed, open access journal that says nano-thermite was found in the paint chips found in the WTC dust. [Hands boss the paper]
Boss: This is idiotic (an actual quote). How long were you planning on spending on this?
Me: 3 days automated SEM-EDX, 3 days XRF/XRD, 4 days of dissolution and mass quantification experiments. 10 days total, about 80 hours of combined instrument time.
Boss: I presume these researchers will be paying you.
Me: No, I was hoping we could do the work for free. Although I'm still expecting to draw my regular salary and have you pay for the power, supplies and maintenance of the equipment.
Boss: Let me get this straight: You want to repeat an experiment that we both agree was done poorly in order to prove false an assertion by an obscure group of non-researchers, which in itself is so patently absurd that they published it in an even more obscure journal. When done correctly, the experiment will prove the superior, carefully controlled RJ Lee study correct, and reaffirm to approximately no one that the twin towers were not demolished by thermite.
Me: Yep.
Boss: And you want me to eat about $50,000 in overhead and operating costs?
Me: Yep.
Boss: [Bad words]
It's paraphrased, but that's about what happens. There is not legitimate scientific reason to do the work. Don't get me wrong, I'd like to shut Jones, Harrit et al up for good, but even a perfectly executed, carefully controlled study won't do that. They're too deep into the woo.