4.7 Article

Surface analysis of pyrite in the No. 9 coal seam, Wuda Coalfield, Inner Mongolia, China, using high-resolution time-of-flight secondary ion mass-spectrometry

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COAL GEOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 2-4, Pages 139-150

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0166-5162(03)00109-5

Keywords

coal; element; pyrite; occurrence; TOF-SIMS

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The chemical composition of pyrite in coal can be used to investigate its geological and mineralogical origin. In this paper, high-resolution time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS) was used to study the chemical composition Of various pyrite forms in the No.9 coal seam (S-t,S-d = 3.46%) from the Wuda Coalfield, Inner Mongolia, northern China. These include bacteriogenic, framboidal, massive, cell-filling, fracture-filling, and nodular pyrites. In addition to Fe+ (Fe-54(+), Fe-56(+), Fe-57(+)), other fragment ions were detected in bacteriogenic pyrites, such as Al-27(+), Si+ (Si-28(+), Si-29(+), Si-30(+)), Ca-40(+), Cu+ (Cu-63(+), Cu-65(+)), Zn+(Zn-64(+), Zn-66(+), Zn-67(+), Zn-68(+)), Ni+ (Ni-58(+), Ni-60(+), Ni-62(+)), and C3H7+. TOF-SIMS images show bacteriogenic pyrites are relatively rich in Cu, Zn, and Ni, suggesting that bacteria probably play an important role in the enrichment of Cu, Zn, and Ni during their formation. Intense positive secondary ion fragments from framboidal aggregates, such as Al-27(+), Si-28(+), Si-29(+), AlO+, CH2+, C3H3+, C3H5+, and C4H7+, indicate that formation of the framboidal aggregates may have occurred together with clay mineral and organic matter, which probably serve as the binding substance. The intense ions of Si-28(+) and Al-27(+) from massive pyrites also suggest that their pores incorporated clay minerals during crystallization. Together with the lowest Si-28(+)/Na-23(+) value, the intense organic positive secondary ion peaks from cell-filling pyrites, such as C3H3+, C3H5+, C3H7+, and C4H7+, indicate 5 7 7 that pyrite formation may have accompanied dissolution or disintegration of the cell. The intense P+ peak was observed only in the fracture-filling pyrite and the highest Si-28(+)/Na-23(+) value of fracture-filling pyrite reflects its epigenetic origin. Together with XRD and REEs data, the stronger Ca-40(+) in nodular pyrite than other pyrite forms shows seawater influence during its formation. (C) 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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