Congratulation, MM, although you are apparently disoriented, you are quite successful in spoiling this thread. Last two pages are almost unreadable because of your messy intrusion.
There may be 3 main reasons for the mess you caused:
1) You have not read this thread from the beginning (or better from post No 104).
2) You have not been able to understand what is written here.
3) You are able to understand at least some very basics, but you are trying to be "disinfo agent".
Perhaps, all three points are valid to some extent
Although Oystein (and some others) was patient enough to try to explain you why and where you are wrong, let me repeat some basic things again.
1) Only paint from that stadium was considered for comparison in Bentham paper.
2) Later on, Jones showed us XEDS spectra (but nothing more) of Tnemec sample in the lecture held in Sydney. We thank to him very much, since XEDS of Tnemec sample is in astounding accordance with XEDS of "MEK chip" (chip (e)) in Bentham paper.
3) NIST used only Tnemec paint for analysis of its thermal behavior, since only this paint was preserved on (perimeter) construction steel from impact zones. Laclede paint on floor trusses, on the other hand, was not available.
Since Laclede paint was almost completely stripped off the steel during collapses, it must be abundant in the WTC dust.
4) This is why this paint is a very good candidate as for origin of red-gray chips (a) to (d). There should be very roughly some 10-40 tons of Laclede red chips in the dust, according to calculations made by Oystein. This is in good agreement with a concentration of those chips (0.02 to 0.1 %) estimated by Harrit and Basile. XEDS spectra of red chips (a) to (d) are in very good agreement with the declared composition of Laclede paint and with XEDS spectra simulated by Almond (post No 156). Consequently, everything is consistent with Laclede paint hypothesis.
One single example of your deep disorientation in the matter, quote:
You will never be happy, because you are obsessed with your dream that LaClede primer paint was the red chip material, in spite of the absurd reality, that if true, such a primer paint was incredibly volatile.MM
1) Laclede primer paint was not "evaporated" from the WTC floor trusses, as you perhaps think (???). It was just stripped off the steel during collapses, frequently together with thin layers of adjacent oxidized steel (gray layers).
2) Otherwise, Laclede paint, containing over 70 % of epoxy binder, was of course and for sure "volatile" at high temperatures!
All epoxies are massively degraded at the temperature range ca 370-430 degrees C both under air and under inert atmosphere. Look, e.g., into this
paper: p. 209-231.
Also, look into my own thermogravimetric curves of heating of Laclede paint imitation under air and under nitrogen here:
http://bobule100.rajce.idnes.cz/epoxides#TGA-air.jpg and here:
http://bobule100.rajce.idnes.cz/epoxides#TGA-N22.jpg As you can see (if you are not completely blind), epoxy in that imitation is massively degraded/oxidized/"volatilized"(evaporated) in this temperature range and only inorganic pigments (iron oxide, aluminosilicate and chromate) remained in the sample. Let me now consider only heating under air, as performed in DSC device in Bentham paper: this behavior (exothermic oxidative degradation of polymer binder at high temperatures) is normal, typical and it has been described in many hundreds of scientific papers. And Harrit et his comrades should know this, before they tried to discuss the meaning of their DSC curves.
Pls, contribute here only if you have something really factual and well-supported. Otherwise, please stop to spoil this thread.