Mineralogy of New Australian X-ray Fluorescence Standards

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 5
- File Size:
- 1454 KB
- Publication Date:
- Aug 12, 2013
Abstract
The mineralogy of new certified-reference-materials (CRM) for X-ray fluorescence from Western Australia (ASCRM 030 to 035) was analysed by X-ray diffraction using the BRUKER energy dispersive one-dimensional detector LYNXEYE-XE. The samples were studied using standard-less quantitative phase analysis, based on the Rietveld method. This method delivers the relative amount of crystalline phases. All materials were found to be high-grade iron ore predominantly consisting of hematite and goethite and very low amounts of magnetite. In addition, the gangue mineralogy was characterised. It consists of low-per cent amounts of carbonate (siderite/calcite), quartz, kaolinite, chlorite and gibbsite.Furthermore, all samples were analysed with the external standard method. This is an elegant way to probe for amorphous content without adding an internal standard. All six samples were found to contain up to 16 per cent amorphous or nano-crystalline material.CITATION:Knorr, K and Birch, S, 2013. Mineralogy of new Australian x-ray fluorescence standards, in Proceedings Iron Ore 2013 , pp 269-274 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
Citation
APA:
(2013) Mineralogy of New Australian X-ray Fluorescence StandardsMLA: Mineralogy of New Australian X-ray Fluorescence Standards. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2013.