Geofingerprinting of coltan using handheld spectroscopic devices

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Samuel Kessinger Jon Kellar Prasoon Diwakar
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
2
File Size:
535 KB
Publication Date:
Mar 1, 2025

Abstract

Tantalum (Ta) and niobium (Nb) are extracted from many different ore types. The major economic orebody mined for tantalum and niobium consists of tantalite ((FeMn)Ta2O5) and columbite ((FeMnNb2O5)) in a solid-solution mineral commonly referred to as “coltan.” The largest supplying region, The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), is unfortunately also the most ethically compromised source for this critical mineral. Officially, the U.S. government has deemed coltan ore from the DRC a “conflict mineral” [1]. The lack of pragmatic and effective local mining regulation in Central Africa, when coupled with high levels of violence and corruption, has spawned a widespread, illegal, unethical and, most importantly, unsafe economy. This illicit economy is centered around first, illegally mining these valuable conflict minerals and second, smuggling these minerals into the global supply chain. Handheld spectroscopy devices could provide further transparency to these opaque supply chains, giving miners, traders and refiners the ability to authenticate the provenance of the minerals they encounter, and allowing companies to prove compliance with the regulatory agencies attempting to curtail illicit mining.
Citation

APA: Samuel Kessinger Jon Kellar Prasoon Diwakar  (2025)  Geofingerprinting of coltan using handheld spectroscopic devices

MLA: Samuel Kessinger Jon Kellar Prasoon Diwakar Geofingerprinting of coltan using handheld spectroscopic devices. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2025.

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