4.6 Article

Assessing and calibrating the ATR-FTIR approach as a carbonate rock characterization tool

Journal

SEDIMENTARY GEOLOGY
Volume 347, Issue -, Pages 36-52

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.sedgeo.2016.07.003

Keywords

ATR-FTIR; Infrared spectroscopy; Qualitative analysis; Quantitative analysis; Mineralogy; Carbonates

Categories

Funding

  1. Qatar Carbonate
  2. Carbon Storage Research Centre (Qatar Petroleum)
  3. Carbon Storage Research Centre (Shell)
  4. Carbon Storage Research Centre (Qatar Science & Technology Park)

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ATR-FTIR (attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared) spectroscopy can be used as a rapid and economical tool for qualitative identification of carbonates, calcium sulphates, oxides and silicates, as well as quantitatively estimating the concentration of minerals. Over 200 powdered samples with known concentrations of two, three, four and five phase mixtures were made, then a suite of calibration curves were derived that can be used to quantify the minerals. The calibration curves in this study have an R-2 that range from 0.93-0.99, a RMSE (root mean square error) of 1-5 wt.% and a maximum error of 3-10 wt.%. The calibration curves were used on 35 geological samples that have previously been studied using XRD (X-ray diffraction). The identification of the minerals using ATR-FTIR is comparable with XRD and the quantitative results have a RMSD (root mean square deviation) of 14% and 12% for calcite and dolomite respectively when compared to XRD results. ATR-FTIR is a rapid technique (identification and quantification takes <5 min) that involves virtually no cost if the machine is available. It is a common tool in most analytical laboratories, but it also has the potential to be deployed on a rig for real-time data acquisition of the mineralogy of cores and rock chips at the surface as there is no need for special sample preparation, rapid data collection and easy analysis. (C) 2016 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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