Investigations on paramagnetic centres in quartz for provenance studies

Author(s):  
Alida Timar-Gabor ◽  
Aditi Dave ◽  
Kathryn Fitzsimmons

<p>The sediment rooting concept [1] relies on the potential to track individual mineral grains from their source to their ultimate sinks. Quartz is the second most abundant mineral in the Earth's crust and occurs in a broad variety of rocks and sediments. It is resistant to weathering and does not form solid solutions, thus being considered a pure mineral. However, even the purest quartz crystal contains a vast number of point defects, which may be either intrinsic (e.g., O-vacancies and related defects or Si vacancies) or due to impurities, most often as combination of monovalent (H<sup>+</sup>, Li<sup>+</sup>, and Na<sup>+</sup>) and trivalent (Al<sup>3+</sup>, Fe<sup>3+</sup>, and B<sup>3+</sup>) cations. Some of these defects remain unchanged under ionising radiation bombardment by the omnipresent natural radioactivity, while others are being transformed, generally by charge trapping. Based on the dynamics of some of these radiation sensitive defects under irradiation, quartz can be used for dating by luminescence or by electron spin resonance.</p><p>Another less explored application of these defects is fingerprinting the sources of the sediments. For provenance applications to be successful, the signals used when looking at quartz from the sediment should match the corresponding signals of quartz from host rocks, thus they should remain unchanged during transport and/or weathering.</p><p>Here we are conducting an exploratory study on quartz from loess from Central Asia (Kazakhstan and Tajikistan). This specific study site was chosen as very recent studies based on geochemical fingerprinting, grain size modelling and present-day meteorological data suggest contribution from different source areas in this Westerlies dominated region [2,3]. Consequently, this area is an ideal test site to look for spatial and temporal variability in source change. We are investigating the signature of E’ (an unpaired electron at an oxygen vacancy site) and peroxy intrinsic defect centers (nonbonding oxygen) as well as the Al-hole ([AlO<sub>4</sub>]<sup>0</sup>, a hole trapped by substitutional trivalent aluminum at a silicon site) paramagnetic signals by electron spin resonance in loess samples, as well as in rock samples. We are also investigating the behaviour of these defects during laboratory experiments that aim at reproducing natural conditions during transport. While work is still in progress, we have observed a significant difference between the E’ and peroxy signals for Kazakh and Tajik samples, which is in tune with the current hypothesis regarding the dust sources in the area presented above.</p><p>References</p><ol><li>Allen, P.A., 2008. From landscapes into geological history. Nature 451, 274-276.</li> <li>Li, Y., Song, Y., Fitzsimmons, K., Chen, X., Wang, Q., Sun, H., Zhang, Z., 2018. New evidence for the provenance and formation of loess deposits in the Ili river basin, Arid Central Asia. Aeolian Research 35, 1-8.</li> <li>Li, Y., Song, Y., Kaskaoutis, D.G., Chen, X., Mamadjanov, Y., Tan, L., 2019. Atmospheric dust dynamics in southern Central Asia: Implications for buildup of Tajikistan loess sediments. Atmospheric Research 229, 74-85.</li> </ol>

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alida Timar-Gabor ◽  
Aditi Dave ◽  
Zuzanna Kabacińska ◽  
Kathryn Fitzsimmons

<p>The sediment-routing concept [1] aims to integrate tectonic fluxes and climatically driven erosion, an approach that is at the core of modern studies into Earth-surface processes. The concept relies on the potential to track individual mineral grains from source to sink. Provenance studies are instrumental in this respect; until recently, almost all of these have focussed on accessory minerals. By contrast, the durability and abundance of quartz ensures that parent rocks containing quartz are represented by detrital quartz in their daughter sediment. Even the purest quartz crystal contains a vast number of point defects, which may be either intrinsic or due to impurities. Some of these defects remain unchanged under ionising radiation bombardment by natural environmental radioactivity, while others are transformed, generally in the form of charge trapping. Based on the dynamics of some of these radiation-sensitive defects under irradiation, quartz is frequently used for dating by luminescence or electron spin resonance (ESR). Another, less explored, application of these defects is the fingerprinting of sediment sources. For provenance applications to be successful, sedimentary quartz signals used should match the corresponding signals of quartz from the host rocks: they should remain unchanged during transport and/or weathering processes.</p><p>Here we conduct an exploratory study on fine (4-11 μm) quartz from loess from Central Asia (Kazakhstan and Tajikistan), a region dominated by westerly air transport. These study sites were chosen since recent studies based on geochemical fingerprinting, grain-size modelling and meteorological reanalysis suggest the contribution from different source areas [2,3]. We investigate the signature of E’ (≡Si·, an unpaired electron at an oxygen vacancy site) and peroxy intrinsic defect centers (≡Si-O-O·and ≡Si–O· non-bridging oxygen) using ESR, by measuring both quartz grains extracted from both untreated samples, and from samples irradiated to 2000 Gy and subsequently heated to 10 min at 350 °C (as suggested by Toyoda and others [4]). By investigating the dose response of these signals, with and without the application of thermal treatments, we conclude that natural E` signals hold great promise for provenance studies, thus considerably simplifying the currently used measurement protocols. We observe a significant difference between the E’ and peroxy signals between the Kazakh and Tajik samples, which is in tune with the hypothesis that the two loess sites derive from different dust sources.</p><p>References</p><p>1. Allen, P.A., 2008. From landscapes into geological history. Nature 451, 274-276.</p><p>2. Li, Y., Song, Y., Fitzsimmons, K., Chen, X., Wang, Q., Sun, H., Zhang, Z., 2018. New evidence for the provenance and formation of loess deposits in the Ili river basin, Arid Central Asia. Aeolian Research 35, 1-8.</p><p>3. Li, Y., Song, Y., Kaskaoutis, D.G., Chen, X., Mamadjanov, Y., Tan, L., 2019. Atmospheric dust dynamics in southern Central Asia: Implications for buildup of Tajikistan loess sediments. Atmospheric Research 229, 74-85.</p><p>4. Toyoda, S., 2011. The E<sub>1</sub>` centre in natural quartz: its formation and applications to dating and provenance reserarches. Geochronometria, 38 (3), 242-248.</p>


1994 ◽  
Vol 338 ◽  
Author(s):  
John F. Conley ◽  
P.M. Lenahan ◽  
H.L. Evans ◽  
R.K. Lowry ◽  
T.J. Morthorst

ABSTRACTWe combine electron spin resonance measurements with vacuum ultraviolet, ultraviolet, and corona bias charge injection schemes to examine the properties and charge trapping roles of three E′ variants in conventionally processed thermally grown thin film SiO2 on Si.


1997 ◽  
Vol 8 (7) ◽  
pp. 1157-1163 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Nagase ◽  
K Aoyagi ◽  
A Hirayama ◽  
M Gotoh ◽  
A Ueda ◽  
...  

There is considerable evidence that uremic patients are in a highly peroxidative state. The purpose of this study was to investigate the serum antioxidant activity that may regulate, or represent, the redox state in vivo. Serum from pre- and posthemodialysis patients and from healthy control subjects was added to a system generating the hydroxyl radical, and then the signal intensities of reactive oxygen species were measured by electron spin resonance and spin-trapping technique. The electron spin resonance signals of the reaction mixture containing prehemodialysis sera were significantly stronger than those of the reaction mixture containing healthy sera (P < 0.001, n = 19), and there was no significant difference in the signals between the reaction mixture containing posthemodialysis and healthy sera. These findings demonstrated that serum antioxidant activity in hemodialysis patients is significantly decreased, and this pathological condition is improved by hemodialysis treatment.


1988 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 97-103
Author(s):  
M. R. Fleet ◽  
S. F. Lincoln ◽  
A. M. Hounslow

AbstractWool samples were collected from two groups of Merino sheep, both of which contained animals that were either heterozygous (Ww) or homozygous (WW) for white fleece. Group 1 were sampled in summer and group 2 in winter. These samples were scoured and measured for electron spin resonance initially (ESR1), following irradiation by ultraviolet light (ESR2) and then after wetting and drying the sample (ESR3).There was no significant difference between WW and Ww sheep in each group for any of the ESR measurements (P > 0·05). However, for ESR1 there was a difference between management groups (group 1> group 2; P < 0·05). The ESR3 on ESR1 values were plotted separately for WW and Ww genotypes. The plotted ESR3 on ESR1 values in both groups showed no differentation into distinct genotype clusters. Nevertheless, for group 2 there was a slight similarity to the cross-like pattern of genotypes reported in an earlier description of this technique and the regression coefficients of ESR3 on ESR1 for WW sheep (b = −0·09 (s.e. 0·28)) differed significantly from those of Ww sheep (b = 1·31 (s.e. 0·52)) (P < 0·05).It appears that the previously published method for differentiating between sheep that are either heterozygous or homozygous for white fleece was ineffective in this case.


2002 ◽  
Vol 715 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Dylla ◽  
R. Carius ◽  
F. Finger

AbstractElectron spin resonance accompanied by conductivity measurements in n-type microcrystalline silicon with different doping concentrations and different structure compositions has been applied for the study of the density of gap states and the influence of these states on charge carrier density. We studied doping concentrations close to the defect density where the doping induced Fermi level (EF) shift is determined by compensation of gap states. We found a correlation between the EF shift, the intrinsic defect density and structural changes.


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