4.5 Article

Microanalytical Approaches to Characterizing REE in Appalachian Basin Underclays

Journal

MINERALS
Volume 10, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/min10060546

Keywords

rare earth elements; rare earth minerals; coal underclay

Funding

  1. agency of the United States Government

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The search for a reliable U.S. domestic source of rare earth elements (REE) is necessary to support the demand of advanced energy applications (e.g., catalysts, electronics, magnets). Sedimentary deposits may be sources for selectively recovering REE and critical metals-specifically the interbedded seat rock, or underclay, that underlies or forms the floor of a coal seam. This material is often a major component of coal waste fines and refuse and thus readily available. This study examines several Appalachian Basin underclays associated with actively mined coal seams as potential feedstocks for the REE. Multimodal microanalytical electron microscopy (SEM, FIB-SEM, EMPA) synchrotron-based mu XRF, and image processing techniques are coupled with detailed elemental and mineral data to classify the 2D and 3D petrophysical properties of the materials. The REE contents of Appalachian Basin underclays were measured from 235-399 ppm and predominantly observed as discrete REE-bearing minerals such as monazite and xenotime on the order of 10-100 mu m in size. These REE-bearing minerals typically accounted for less than 1% of the scanned areas and volumes under SEM and FIB-SEM analysis, with the exception of regions enriched in crandallite. Synchrotron-based mu XRF elemental maps further identified several REE deposition environments in different underclays, including micro-scale (10-100 mu m) light REEs co-localizing with Ca and P, micro-scale heavy REEs with Fe, and large-scale light REEs (>200 mu m) co-localizing with Sr, Ba, Ca and P.

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