(U)SAXS characterization of porous microstructure of chert: insights into organic matter preservation

article
Autores

Munoz, Patricio

Ilavsky, Jan

Newville, Matthew

Wetter, Niklaus U.

Lourenço, Rafael André

Barbosa De Andrade, Marcelo

Martins, Tereza S.

Dipold, Jessica

Freitas, Anderson Z.

Cides Da Silva, Luis Carlos

Oliveira, Cristiano Luis Pinto

Data de Publicação

1 de dezembro de 2023

Resumo

This study characterizes the microstructure and mineralogy of 132 (ODP sample), 1000 and 1880 million-year-old chert samples. By using ultra-small-angle X-ray scattering (USAXS), wide-angle X-ray scattering and other techniques, the preservation of organic matter (OM) in these samples is studied. The scarce microstructural data reported on chert contrast with many studies addressing porosity evolution in other sedimentary rocks. The aim of this work is to solve the distribution of OM and silica in chert by characterizing samples before and after combustion to pinpoint the OM distribution inside the porous silica matrix. The samples are predominantly composed of alpha quartz and show increasing crystallite sizes up to 33 ± 5 nm (1σ standard deviation or SD). In older samples, low water abundances (∼0.03%) suggest progressive dehydration. (U)SAXS data reveal a porous matrix that evolves over geological time, including, from younger to older samples, (1) a decreasing pore volume down to 1%, (2) greater pore sizes hosting OM, (3) decreasing specific surface area values from younger (9.3 ± 0.1 m 2 g −1 ) to older samples (0.63 ± 0.07 m 2 g −1 , 1σ SD) and (4) a lower background intensity correlated to decreasing hydrogen abundances. The pore-volume distributions (PVDs) show that pores ranging from 4 to 100 nm accumulate the greater volume fraction of OM. Raman data show aromatic organic clusters up to 20 nm in older samples. Raman and PVD data suggest that OM is located mostly in mesopores. Observed structural changes, silica–OM interactions and the hydrophobicity of the OM could explain the OM preservation in chert.

Citação

BibTeX
@online{patricio2023,
  author = {Patricio , Munoz and Jan , Ilavsky and Matthew , Newville
    and Niklaus U. , Wetter and Rafael André , Lourenço and De Andrade,
    Marcelo, Barbosa and Tereza S. , Martins and Jessica , Dipold and
    Anderson Z. , Freitas and Da Silva, Luis Carlos, Cides and Cristiano
    Luis Pinto , Oliveira},
  title = {(U)SAXS characterization of porous microstructure of chert:
    insights into organic matter preservation},
  volume = {56},
  number = {6},
  date = {2023-12-01},
  doi = {10.1107/S1600576723008889},
  langid = {pt-BR},
  abstract = {This study characterizes the microstructure and mineralogy
    of 132 (ODP sample), 1000 and 1880 million-year-old chert samples.
    By using ultra-small-angle X-ray scattering (USAXS), wide-angle
    X-ray scattering and other techniques, the preservation of organic
    matter (OM) in these samples is studied. The scarce microstructural
    data reported on chert contrast with many studies addressing
    porosity evolution in other sedimentary rocks. The aim of this work
    is to solve the distribution of OM and silica in chert by
    characterizing samples before and after combustion to pinpoint the
    OM distribution inside the porous silica matrix. The samples are
    predominantly composed of alpha quartz and show increasing
    crystallite sizes up to 33 ± 5 nm (1σ standard deviation or SD). In
    older samples, low water abundances (∼0.03\%) suggest progressive
    dehydration. (U)SAXS data reveal a porous matrix that evolves over
    geological time, including, from younger to older samples, (1) a
    decreasing pore volume down to 1\%, (2) greater pore sizes hosting
    OM, (3) decreasing specific surface area values from younger (9.3 ±
    0.1 m 2 g −1 ) to older samples (0.63 ± 0.07 m 2 g −1 , 1σ SD) and
    (4) a lower background intensity correlated to decreasing hydrogen
    abundances. The pore-volume distributions (PVDs) show that pores
    ranging from 4 to 100 nm accumulate the greater volume fraction of
    OM. Raman data show aromatic organic clusters up to 20 nm in older
    samples. Raman and PVD data suggest that OM is located mostly in
    mesopores. Observed structural changes, silica–OM interactions and
    the hydrophobicity of the OM could explain the OM preservation in
    chert.}
}
Por favor, cite este trabalho como:
Patricio, Munoz, Ilavsky Jan, Newville Matthew, Wetter Niklaus U., Lourenço Rafael André, Barbosa De Andrade, Marcelo, Martins Tereza S., et al. 2023. “(U)SAXS characterization of porous microstructure of chert: insights into organic matter preservation.” Journal of Applied Crystallography. December 1, 2023. https://doi.org/10.1107/S1600576723008889.