carbonate sample
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2021 ◽  
Vol 193 (9) ◽  
Author(s):  
Janin Scheplitz ◽  
Sarah Koopmann ◽  
Henning Fröllje ◽  
Thomas Pichler

AbstractSequential extraction analyses are widely used for the determination of element speciation in sediments and soils. Typical sequential extraction protocols were developed to extract from low-carbonate samples and therefore are not necessarily suitable for high-carbonate samples. In this study, we tested increased reagent to sample ratios to adjust an existing sequential extraction procedure to analyze high-CaCO3 samples with concentrations ranging from 70 to above 90 %. Complete dissolution of the CaCO3 phase, and a higher extraction efficiency of manganese associated with the carbonate phase, was achieved when using four times the original reagent to sample ratio in the 2nd extraction step. This increase of reagent did not compromise the extraction of subsequent phases as shown by unaffected Fe concentrations in a low-carbonate sample. Hence, an essential outcome was that increasing the solution to sample ratio did not lead to the dissolution of other sedimentary phases, such as hydrous and crystalline iron oxides or sulfides. Thus, compared to other extraction protocols that use a lower reagent to sample ratio in the carbonate dissolution step, the new protocol allowed the complete extraction of oxide and sulfide phases in the following extraction steps. Furthermore, the study demonstrated the benefit of replacing Na-acetate with NH4-acetate to extract exchangeable ions and carbonates. We observed increased intensities for several analytes, i.e., trace metals such as Mo and As, due to less suppression of the analyte signal by NH4-acetate than by Na-acetate during analysis by inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauren Kedar ◽  
Clare Bond ◽  
David Muirhead

<p>Organic carbon in rocks undergoes nanostructural changes when exposed to increased temperatures or strain. These changes can be identified using Raman spectroscopy, giving information about thermal maturity and strain conditions. However, it is well documented that in a heterogeneous rock, strain can be highly localised, evident in microstructural variations such as strain shadows, sub-grain development, twinning, and the rotation and alignment of crystal axes. In this study we map microstructural textures in deformed calcite through optical microscopy and EBSD of calcite crystal axes. This textural map is compared to mapped Raman spectral parameters of organic carbon particles in the same thin section. A comparison of the maps allows assessment of the extent to which Raman spectral parameters and hence carbon nanostructure is influenced by strain at a sub-mm scale. The study highlights the sensitivity of organic carbon nanostructure to sub-mm scale changes in strain localisation within a single deformed carbonate sample.</p>


IEEE Access ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Mohamed Soufiane Jouini ◽  
Jorge Gomes ◽  
Moussa Tembely ◽  
Ezdeen Raed Ibrahim

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Taqi Alzaki ◽  
Saud Al-Dughaimi ◽  
Arqam Muqtadir ◽  
Mohamed E. Kandil ◽  
Jack Dvorkin

Abstract A carbonate sample extracted from the depth of about 10 kft was subjected to uniaxial loading while the confining stress remained constant. Post-experiment inspection of the sample showed an inclined crack at an angle less than 20° to the horizontal. This subhorizontal crack orientation was contrary to the expected 45° inclination, the plane of the maximum shear stress. Coincidentally, as shown by CT-scan prior to loading, there was a boundary between two layers of different density inside the sample located almost exactly where the crack appeared. This density difference has arguably translated into the contrast in the elastic properties at the boundary. The hypothesis is that because of this elastic heterogeneity, an incipient crack developed at the boundary due to the unavoidable tensile stressing of the sample as it was brought to the benchtop from its original state of high confining stress at depth. Controlled uniaxial compression made the sample slip along this crack, which then developed into a prominent feature. This assumption was corroborated by a numerical experiment showing a strong von Mises stress concentration at the elastic contrast boundary during hydrostatic tensile loading. Another sample, from the same formation, but without strong density heterogeneity, exhibited a classic 45° crack after uniaxial loading. These results provide a novel and important insight into the mechanics, breakage, and strength of natural rock.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine Mottram ◽  
et al.

Full analytical materials, gouge and detailed carbonate sample descriptions and locations, summary of additional U-Pb geochronology plots and interpretation, structural data, and Data Set S1 (K-Ar results), Data Set S2 (X-ray diffraction results), Data Set S3 (U-Pb carbonate results), and Data Set S4 (U-Pb standard reproducibility). <br>


2020 ◽  
Vol 143 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Jawad Munawar ◽  
Sandra Vega ◽  
Chengyan Lin ◽  
Mohammad Alsuwaidi ◽  
Naveed Ahsan ◽  
...  

Abstract Scaling porosity of sedimentary rocks from the scale of measurement to the scale of interest is still a challenge. Upscaling of porosity can assist to accurately predict other petrophysical properties of rock at multiple scales. In this study, we use the two-dimensional (2D) scanning electron microscope (SEM) and three-dimensional (3D) X-ray micro-computed tomography (micro-CT) image to upscale porosity from the image scale to the core plug scale. A systematic imaging plan is deployed to capture rock properties of a carbonate and a sandstone sample, which are sensitive to the fractal nature of these rocks. Image analysis records wider pore spectrum (0.12–50 µm) in the carbonate sample than in sandstone (0.12–30 µm). The fractal dimensions are also higher in the carbonate than in the sandstone sample. Median, volume-weighted average of pore radius, and fractal dimensions derived from the image analysis are used as inputs in this equation. The results of the present study using this equation yielded to the best results on a resolution of 2.5 µm/voxel in the sandstone and 2.01 µm/voxel resolution in the carbonate sample for 3D micro-CT images, where fractal-scaling porosity matches well with the porosity measured at the core plug scale. The 2D SEM images provided a good estimation of porosity in the sandstone sample, where micro-CT imaging techniques could not capture the full pore spectrum. The fractal porosity equation showed promising results and offers a potential alternative way to estimate porosity when there are no routine core measurements available.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine Mottram ◽  
et al.

Full analytical materials, gouge and detailed carbonate sample descriptions and locations, summary of additional U-Pb geochronology plots and interpretation, structural data, and Data Set S1 (K-Ar results), Data Set S2 (X-ray diffraction results), Data Set S3 (U-Pb carbonate results), and Data Set S4 (U-Pb standard reproducibility). <br>


Radiocarbon ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 61 (5) ◽  
pp. 1431-1440
Author(s):  
Quan Hua ◽  
Vladimir A Levchenko ◽  
Matthew A Kosnik

ABSTRACTWe have investigated the possibility of direct accelerator mass spectrometry radiocarbon (AMS 14C) measurement of carbonate samples at ANSTO using the STAR 2 MV tandem accelerator. Each carbonate sample was powdered, mixed with metal powder and pressed into an aluminum cathode for direct carbonate measurement by AMS 14C. Of the three high-purity metal powders (Fe, Nb, and Ag) used in our investigation, Nb was found to be the best metal, which delivered higher carbon beam currents and lower background. Beam currents for targets containing the optimal carbonate mass of 1.5–2.0 mg were ∼8% of those obtained from graphite targets of standard size (>0.5 mg C). Typical measured blank for Carrara marble (IAEA-C1) of ∼40 ka was obtained. Background-corrected 14C values of carbonate targets agreed well with their associated values obtained from high-precision analysis of graphite targets within 2σ uncertainties. Typical precision of this rapid AMS analysis was ∼1% for samples <8 ka. Despite lower precision for carbonate target ages (compared to standard graphite target ages), these ages are useful for palaeobiological applications where a large number of dates are required, such as time-averaging studies.


2018 ◽  
Vol 33 (8) ◽  
pp. 1372-1383 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Christina Obert ◽  
Denis Scholz ◽  
Jörg Lippold ◽  
Thomas Felis ◽  
Klaus Peter Jochum ◽  
...  

Ion exchange chemistry and MC-ICPMS measurements of U, Th, Pa and Ra isotope ratios from the same carbonate sample.


2014 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 149-163 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauren Pouille ◽  
Taniel Danelian ◽  
Leonid E. Popov

Abstract. A diverse and well-preserved radiolarian assemblage was extracted from a carbonate sample of latest Darriwilian age from the Shundy Formation of the Aksuran Mountain (North Balkhash Region, Kazakhstan). The fauna is represented by 32 species or morphotypes which belong to nine genera, four families and two orders (Spumellaria and Entactinaria), including four new species described herein (Syntagentactinia? angulata n. sp. Pouille &amp; Danelian, Polyentactinia spinulenta n. sp. Pouille &amp; Danelian, Haplotaeniatum circulus n. sp. Pouille &amp; Danelian and H.? giganteum n. sp. Pouille &amp; Danelian). Representatives of the family Inaniguttidae are particularly abundant, representing c. 70% of the studied assemblage, especially genera Triplococcus and Inanihella that dominate the assemblage. Although the studied fauna contains both of the characteristic species and most of the genera of the previously defined Haplentactinia juncta–Inanigutta unica assemblage, differences in the assemblage structure are striking. The studied fauna also establishes that the two characteristic species of the Inanihella bakanasensis–Triplococcus akzhala assemblage are not restricted to the early–mid-Darriwilian, but their age range also extends to the latest Darriwilian.


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