4.7 Article

Raman spectroscopy of intruded coals from the Illinois Basin: Correlation with rank and estimated alteration temperature

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COAL GEOLOGY
Volume 219, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.coal.2019.103369

Keywords

Intruded coals; Contact metamorphism; Temperature; Raman spectroscopy; Geothermometer

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41672150]
  2. Spackman Award from The Society for Organic Petrology
  3. Medlin Scholarship from the Energy Division, Geological Society of America
  4. Graduate and Professional Research Council, Southern Illinois University Carbondale (SIUC)
  5. China Scholarship Council (CSC) [201606430030]

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Raman spectroscopy was used to evaluate rank for a series of coals collected adjacent to an igneous intrusion. For these intruded coals, Raman parameters for collotelinite and its coked equivalent show complex changes during the transformation from low to very high levels of maturity (with vitrinite reflectance increasing from 0.55% to 5.0%). With increasing coal rank up to anthracite-level reflectance, the Raman spectra show a decrease in both G band full width at half maximum (FWHM) and D band intensity. The D band shape becomes increasingly asymmetric during the bituminization and de-bituminization stages, whereas in the anthracitization stage, the width of the D and G bands continues to decrease while D band intensity increases. In meta-anthracites (as seen in the ancillary Hunan samples), the G band has a low intensity and undergoes an apparent broadening due to the presence of the D2 band that occurs as a shoulder on the G band. Differences in Raman spectral parameters for vitrinite and inertinite macerals suggest differences in molecular structure between the macerals; as such, the heterogeneous nature of coal may affect Raman spectral results significantly if different maceral types are not considered. Within individual samples, Raman spectra indicate a high level of structural homogeneity between and within vitrinite particles, allowing assessment of differences between samples of different ranks. For vitrinite, the Raman spectral parameters G FWHM and DAs/GA (Area((1100-s))/Area((s-1650)), s is the saddle point between 1100 cm(-1) and 1650 cm(-1)) are highly correlated (R-2 > 0.9) with vitrinite reflectance (R-r) and maximum alteration temperature (T-peak), and allow establishment of geothermometers over the temperature range of similar to 70-300 degrees C that can be used to evaluate temperatures attained in intruded coals.

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