Bragg’s rule

https://doi.org/10.1351/goldbook.09231
Empirical rule formulated by W.H. Bragg and R. Kleeman that states that the stopping cross section of a compound sample is equal to the sum of the products of the elemental stopping cross sections for each constituent and its atomic fraction. \[S_{\ce{AB}}(\varepsilon) = xS_{\ce{A}}(\varepsilon) + yS_{\ce{B}}(\varepsilon)\] where \(S_{\ce{AB}}(\varepsilon)\) is the stopping cross section of the compound \(\ce{A}_{x}\ce{B}_{y}\), and \(S_{\ce{A}}(\varepsilon)\) and \(S_{\ce{B}}(\varepsilon)\) are the stopping cross sections of elements \(\ce{A}\) and \(\ce{B}\), respectively.
Source:
PAC, 2020, 92, 1781. 'Glossary of methods and terms used in surface chemical analysis (IUPAC Recommendations 2020)' on page 1799 (https://doi.org/10.1515/pac-2019-0404)