| Literature DB >> 30109512 |
Matthew G Siebecker1,2, Rufus L Chaney3, Donald L Sparks4,5.
Abstract
Serpentine soils and ultramafic laterites develop over ultramafic bedrock and are important geological materials from environmental, geochemical, and industrial standpoints. They have naturally elevated concentrations of trace metals, such as Ni, Cr, and Co, and also high levels of Fe and Mg. Minerals host these trace metals and influence metal mobility. Ni in particular is an important trace metal in these soils, and the objective of this research was to use microscale (µ) techniques to identify naturally occurring minerals that contain Ni and Ni correlations with other trace metals, such as Fe, Mn, and Cr. Synchrotron based µ-XRF, µ-XRD, and µ-XAS were used. Ni was often located in the octahedral layer of serpentine minerals, such as lizardite, and in other layered phyllosilicate minerals with similar octahedral structure, such as chlorite group minerals including clinochlore and chamosite. Ni was also present in goethite, hematite, magnetite, and ferrihydrite. Goethite was present with lizardite and antigorite on the micrometer scale. Lizardite integrated both Ni and Mn simultaneously in its octahedral layer. Enstatite, pargasite, chamosite, phlogopite, and forsterite incorporated various amounts of Ni and Fe over the micrometer spatial scale. Ni content increased six to seven times within the same 500 µm µ-XRD transect on chamosite and phlogopite. Data are shown down to an 8 µm spatial scale. Ni was not associated with chromite or zincochromite particles. Ni often correlated with Fe and Mn, and generally did not correlate with Cr, Zn, Ca, or K in µ-XRF maps. A split shoulder feature in the µ-XAS data at 8400 eV (3.7 Å-1 in k-space) is highly correlated (94% of averaged LCF results) to Ni located in the octahedral sheet of layered phyllosilicate minerals, such as serpentine and chlorite-group minerals. A comparison of bulk-XAS LCF to averaged µ-XAS LCF results showed good representation of the bulk soil via the µ-XAS technique for two of the three soils. In the locations analyzed by µ-XAS, average Ni speciation was dominated by layered phyllosilicate and serpentine minerals (76%), iron oxides (18%), and manganese oxides (9%). In the locations analyzed by µ-XRD, average Ni speciation was dominated by layered phyllosilicate, serpentine, and ultramafic-related minerals (71%) and iron oxides (17%), illustrating the complementary nature of these two methods.Entities:
Keywords: EXAFS; Laterite; Nickel; Serpentine; Soil chemistry; Trace metal; Ultramafic; XRD
Year: 2018 PMID: 30109512 PMCID: PMC6091439 DOI: 10.1186/s12932-018-0059-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Geochem Trans ISSN: 1467-4866 Impact factor: 4.737
Fig. 1Ni distribution in forsterite. High-resolution photograph delineating the area of analysis (a); averaged µ-XRD spectra from points A–F (b); µ-XRF map (c); and the µ-EXAFS data obtained at the smaller white circle in the map along with Ni K-edge EXAFS of San Carlos Olivine [64] for comparison. This figure a–d was selected from Additional file 1: Figure S22 (“s20unt” region 4); the combination of microfocused techniques highlights the benefits of using multiple tools to analyze the same sample location. Here, the µ-EXAFS and µ-XRD spectra both indicate that Ni is located in forsterite, which is an olivine-series mineral
Fig. 2A compilation of all µ-XAS spectra. Normalized Ni K-edge µ-XANES spectra, 13 total (a); a close-up view of the first large oscillation close to the end of the XANES region (b); Ni K-edge µ-EXAFS spectra, 8 total (c). The spectra are shown in order of appearance in Additional file 1 and progress numerically and alphabetically with respect to sample name and regions of interest. All spectra are color coded to remain the same throughout the manuscript and Additional file 1
A summary of all minerals identified by µ-XRD in each sample and spectrum
In total, 74 µ-XRD figures are in Additional file 1 including 88 different spectra. Elements present at each spot are listed, and of the 88 µ-XRD spectra, 55 are from minerals that contained Ni to some degree (CPS)
Summary of Ni and elemental distributions in each map
| Notes on elemental distribution → sample↓ | A | B | C | D | E | F | G | H |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ni diffuse with Fe | Ni diffuse with Mn | Ni hotspot with Fe | Ni hotspot with Mn | Ni unassociated hotspots | Fe unassociated hotspots | Mn unassociated hotspots | Other unassociated hotspots | |
| Figure S4a—s10t2 region 1 map | x | x | x | x | x | Cr | ||
| Figure S4b—s10t2 region 1 map | x | x | x | |||||
| Figure S5—s10t2 region 4 map | x | x | x | x | Cr/Zn | |||
| Figure S6a—s10t2 region 5 map | x | x | x | x | x | x | Cr | |
| Figure S6b—s10t2 region 5 mini map J | x | x | Cr, Ti | |||||
| Figure S6c—s10t2 region 5 mini map M&C | x | x | x | x | x | Cr/Zn, Ti | ||
| Figure S6d—s10t2 region 5 mini map Q | x | x | x | Cr/Zn, Ti | ||||
| Figure S7—s10t2 clay particles map | x | x | ||||||
| Figure S8a—s10t2 silt particles map | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Figure S8b—s10t2 silt particles map | x | x | x | x | x | Cr | ||
| Figure S9a—s10t2 medium sand map | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Figure S9b—s10t2 medium sand map | x | x | x | x | Cr/Zn | |||
| Figure S10—s11unt map A1 | x | x | Ti | |||||
| Figure S11—s11unt map A2 | x | x | x | x | Cr/Zn, Ti | |||
| Figure S12a—s11unt map B1 | x | x | x | x | ||||
| Figure S12b—s11unt map B1 | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Figure S13—s11unt map B2 | x | x | x | Cr, Ti | ||||
| Figure S14—s11unt map C | x | x | x | x | Ti, Ca | |||
| Figure S15—s11unt map D1 | x | x | x | Zn | ||||
| Figure S16a—s11unt map D2 | x | x | x | x | x | x | ||
| Figure S16b—s11unt map D2 | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Figure S17—s11unt map E | x | x | x | x | Cr/Zn, Ti | |||
| Figure S18—s11unt map F | x | x | x | Cr, Ti, Ca | ||||
| Figure S19a—s11unt silt map | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Figure S19b—s11unt silt map | x | x | x | x | x | |||
| Figure S19c—s11unt silt high‐res | x | x | Cr/Zn, Ti, Ca | |||||
| Figure S20—s20unt region 1 map | x | x | x | x | ||||
| Figure S21—s20unt region 3 map | x | x | x | x | x | x | Cr/Zn/Fe | |
| Figure S22—s20unt region 4 map | x | x | x | x | x | x | Cr/Zn | |
| Figure S23a—s20unt region 6 map | x | x | x | x | x | x | x | Cr/Zn, Ti |
| Figure S23b—s20unt region 6 spot A map | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Figure S23c—s20unt region 6 spot B map | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| # of occurrences | 19 | 7 | 14 | 17 | 12 | 21 | 12 | |
| % of occurring | 76 | 28 | 56 | 68 | 48 | 84 | 48 |
Several of the maps are smaller, higher resolution maps and thus not included in the last row tallies
Summary the LCF results from µ-EXAFS and µ-XANES spectra
| Figure | Sample | Spot label on figure | μ-XANES | μ-EXAFS | μ-XRD | Split present | Elements at spot (via µ-XRF map) | LCF results (standards in Table S2) | R-factor from LCF | F-test value for n + 1 standards | Delta E0 (eV) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Figure S6b | s10t2 region 5 mini map J | xas J | x | x | no | Ni, Fe | 74% iron oxide (Ni-hematite) | 0.0004 | 5.4% | N/A | |
| Figure S6c | s10t2 region 5 mini map M&C | xas M | x | no | Ni, Mn | 75% layered serpentine mineral (Ni–Al LDH) | 0.0003 | N/A | 0.421 (0.013) | ||
| Figure S6c | s10t2 region 5 mini map M&C | xas C | x | yes | Ni, Fe (low) | 83% layered serpentine mineral (Ni-serp 5811) | 0.006 | N/A | N/A | ||
| Figure S6d | s10t2 region 5 mini map Q | xas Q | x | yes | Ni, Mn, Fe | 50% Layered serpentine mineral (Ni-serp 5811) | 0.0005 | N/A | 0.468 (0.024) | ||
| Figure S12a | s11unt map B1 | xas1 | x | x | x | yes | Ni, Fe (low), Mn (low) | 39% layered serpentine mineral (Ni-gibbsite) | 0.084 | 80% | N/A |
| Figure S12a | s11unt map B1 | xas2 | x | x | yes | Ni, Fe, Mn (low) | 37% layered serpentine mineral (Ni-gibbsite) | 0.107 | 64% | N/A | |
| Figure S16a | s11unt map D2 | xas1 | x | x | x | yes | Ni, Mn | 79% layered serpentine mineral (Ni-gibbsite) | 0.044 | 28% | N/A |
| Figure S16a | s11unt map D2 | xas2 | x | x | yes | Ni | 70% layered serpentine mineral (Ni-gibbsite) | 0.061 | 41% | N/A | |
| Figure S22 | s20unt region 4 map | rgn4 xas | x | x | x | no | Fe, Ni | See Fig. | N/A | N/A | N/A |
| Figure S23b | s20unt region 6 mini map A | spA | x | x | yes | Ni | 67% layered serpentine mineral (Ni–Al LDH) | 0.0006 | ≪1% | 0.400 (0.078) | |
| Figure S23c | s20unt region 6 mini map B | xas1 | x | x | no | Ni, Fe | 46% layered serpentine mineral (Ni-gibbsite) | 0.068 | 9% | N/A | |
| Figure S23c | s20unt region 6 mini map B | xas2 | x | x | yes | Ni, Fe (low) | 42% layered serpentine mineral (Ni-silicate) | 0.062 | 10% | N/A | |
| Figure S23c | s20unt region 6 mini map B | xas3 | x | x | no | Ni, Fe low), Mn | 73% manganese oxide (Ni-RS birn) | 0.037 | 8% | N/A |
Samples with µ-XANES and µ-EXAFS data are identified along with those samples where complementary µ-XRD spectra were obtained. The presence of a split shoulder at 8400 eV and 3.7 Å−1 for µ-XANES and µ-EXAFS data, respectively, is also indicated along with the elements present at that location according the µ-XRF maps. Error values for E0 are adjacent in parentheses (see Additional file 1: Text S2.4.)