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Identification of Uranium Minerals in Natural U-Bearing Rocks Using Infrared Reflectance Spectroscopy.

Authors :
Beiswenger TN
Gallagher NB
Myers TL
Szecsody JE
Tonkyn RG
Su YF
Sweet LE
Lewallen TA
Johnson TJ
Source :
Applied spectroscopy [Appl Spectrosc] 2018 Feb; Vol. 72 (2), pp. 209-224. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Dec 28.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The identification of minerals, including uranium-bearing species, is often a labor-intensive process using X-ray diffraction (XRD), fluorescence, or other solid-phase or wet chemical techniques. While handheld XRD and fluorescence instruments can aid in field applications, handheld infrared (IR) reflectance spectrometers can now also be used in industrial or field environments, with rapid, nondestructive identification possible via analysis of the solid's reflectance spectrum providing information not found in other techniques. In this paper, we report the use of laboratory methods that measure the IR hemispherical reflectance of solids using an integrating sphere and have applied it to the identification of mineral mixtures (i.e., rocks), with widely varying percentages of uranium mineral content. We then apply classical least squares (CLS) and multivariate curve resolution (MCR) methods to better discriminate the minerals (along with two pure uranium chemicals U <subscript>3</subscript> O <subscript>8</subscript> and UO <subscript>2</subscript> ) against many common natural and anthropogenic background materials (e.g., silica sand, asphalt, calcite, K-feldspar) with good success. Ground truth as to mineral content was attained primarily by XRD. Identification is facile and specific, both for samples that are pure or are partially composed of uranium (e.g., boltwoodite, tyuyamunite, etc.) or non-uranium minerals. The characteristic IR bands generate unique (or class-specific) bands, typically arising from similar chemical moieties or functional groups in the minerals: uranyls, phosphates, silicates, etc. In some cases, the chemical groups that provide spectral discrimination in the longwave IR reflectance by generating upward-going (reststrahlen) bands can provide discrimination in the midwave and shortwave IR via downward-going absorption features, i.e., weaker overtone or combination bands arising from the same chemical moieties.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1943-3530
Volume :
72
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Applied spectroscopy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29282991
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0003702817743265