Aluminosilicates are the most abundant minerals on the earth and are widely studied and exploited for both research and industrial purposes. Together with mineralogical and physical investigations, chemical analysis of aluminosilicates is a crucial step in their study and characterization. Due to their abundance, sample procurement is not a problem and elemental analysis is usually performed by ICP-AES, ICP-MS, after complete mineralization of the sample, or by EDXRF and WDXRF, using 1-5 g of material. However, in some fields of research (i.e. ceramic archaeometry, material synthesis, catalysis, sorption studies, clays extraction from sediments and soils, etc.) only a very few amount of sample is usually available, and a method which could allow a reliable chemical analysis and preserve the sample as much as possible is required. A method for the elemental analysis of clays using TXRF was already developed[1] but light elements like Na and Mg could not be quantified due to the limitations of commercially available spectrometers for the analysis of light elements. However, the quantification of these two elements is very important for an exhaustive chemical characterization of aluminosilicates. For this reason, in the present work, a new strategy for the analysis of light elements in aluminosilicates is presented. The study was carried out using a Low-Z TXRF spectrometer equipped with a Cr source (30 kV, 10 mA), an Atominstitut TXRF Standard Vacuum Chamber (1 mbar), a W/C multilayer monochromator and a SDD with an ultrathin polymer window[2]. A set of six different aluminosilicate-rock reference materials was used for calibration and other three reference materials were used for validation. Samples were prepared as suspension using Ag as internal standard. In this way, all the elements from F to Ti were detected and quantified with good accuracy (80-120%). Moreover, Fe was also quantified using Lα lines. The obtained results will be discussed on both the analytical and technological point of view, with the aim of identifying the best equipment and condition for a full elemental characterization of aluminosilicates.

Direct analysis of light elements in aluminosilicates using a Low-Z TXRF spectrometer

Terzano R
2022-01-01

Abstract

Aluminosilicates are the most abundant minerals on the earth and are widely studied and exploited for both research and industrial purposes. Together with mineralogical and physical investigations, chemical analysis of aluminosilicates is a crucial step in their study and characterization. Due to their abundance, sample procurement is not a problem and elemental analysis is usually performed by ICP-AES, ICP-MS, after complete mineralization of the sample, or by EDXRF and WDXRF, using 1-5 g of material. However, in some fields of research (i.e. ceramic archaeometry, material synthesis, catalysis, sorption studies, clays extraction from sediments and soils, etc.) only a very few amount of sample is usually available, and a method which could allow a reliable chemical analysis and preserve the sample as much as possible is required. A method for the elemental analysis of clays using TXRF was already developed[1] but light elements like Na and Mg could not be quantified due to the limitations of commercially available spectrometers for the analysis of light elements. However, the quantification of these two elements is very important for an exhaustive chemical characterization of aluminosilicates. For this reason, in the present work, a new strategy for the analysis of light elements in aluminosilicates is presented. The study was carried out using a Low-Z TXRF spectrometer equipped with a Cr source (30 kV, 10 mA), an Atominstitut TXRF Standard Vacuum Chamber (1 mbar), a W/C multilayer monochromator and a SDD with an ultrathin polymer window[2]. A set of six different aluminosilicate-rock reference materials was used for calibration and other three reference materials were used for validation. Samples were prepared as suspension using Ag as internal standard. In this way, all the elements from F to Ti were detected and quantified with good accuracy (80-120%). Moreover, Fe was also quantified using Lα lines. The obtained results will be discussed on both the analytical and technological point of view, with the aim of identifying the best equipment and condition for a full elemental characterization of aluminosilicates.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11586/496722
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