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GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 Matt Newville, Steve Sutton, Mark Rivers, Peter Eng Consortium for Advanced Radiation Sources.

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Presentation on theme: "GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 Matt Newville, Steve Sutton, Mark Rivers, Peter Eng Consortium for Advanced Radiation Sources."— Presentation transcript:

1 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 Matt Newville, Steve Sutton, Mark Rivers, Peter Eng Consortium for Advanced Radiation Sources University of Chicago (DOE and NSF support) x-ray absorption spectroscopy (XANES and EXAFS) Synchrotron x-ray techniques: oxidation state of selected element, near-neighbor distances and coordination numbers elemental abundance and correlationsx-ray fluorescence Synchrotron Techniques in Environmental Sciences x-ray diffractioncrystallographic structure, phase identification, and surface structures x-ray imaging & tomography3-dimensional densities, elemental abundances

2 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 X-ray Applications for Geo/Environmental Sciences G. E. Brown, Jr. and N. Sturchio identified these important issues in low-temperature geochemistry and environmental science: From: An Overview of Synchrotron Applications in Low Temperature Geochemistry and Environmental Science. Reviews of Mineralogy & Geochemistry (vol 49, 2002):  In-situ studies, e.g. in the presence of water, water vapor, biota, … are critical.  Molecular-level speciation of trace environmental contaminants are necessary for understanding their behavior.  Complex natural systems and model systems must be studied in parallel.  Complementary characterization and modeling methods are necessary.  The nature of solid/water interface and sorbed species must be known.  Molecular mechanisms of bio- and phyto-remediation must be understood. Synchrotron x-ray techniques are powerful tools for addressing these issues.

3 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 What is a Synchrotron? A very bright x-ray source Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Lab, Argonne Illinois 7 GeV electron storage ring producing high- brilliance x-ray beams. ~40 experimental stations running simultaneously, with a wide range of applications. 1 of 4 US DOE run x-ray sources operated as User Facilities (easy access). Many similar machines throughout the world. Electrons accelerated to 7GeV emit hard x-rays (1 to 100 keV).

4 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 Synchrotron: a very bright x-ray source Advanced Photon Source, Argonne National Lab, Argonne Illinois 7 GeV electron storage ring producing high- brilliance x-ray beams. ~40 experimental stations running simultaneously, with a wide range of applications. 1 of 4 US DOE run x-ray sources operated as User Facilities (easy access). Many similar machines throughout the world. GSECARS: 1 of ~7 stations doing Environmental Science at the APS

5 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 x-ray brilliance for conventional laboratory and synchrotrons: brilliance = # of monochromatic x- rays per second, per area, per solid angle: how many monochromatic x-rays in a beam of light? Synchrotron x-rays have a broad energy spectrum “white light”, and are collimated in space. They can be focused to a few microns (sometimes smaller) or as large as several millimeters in size. x-rays are mostly non-destructive. X-ray Properties of Synchrotrons

6 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 Typical Experimental Station: (x-ray microprobe) Focusing: Kirkpatrick-Baez mirrors: Rh- coated Si, typically using 2x3  m spot sizes, at 50mm from end of mirrors. Incident Beam: LN 2 cooled Si (111) mono Sample Stage: x-y-z stage, 1  m resolution Fluorescence detectors: 16-element Ge detector with DXP electronics Si-drift detector (shown) Lytle Ion Chamber Bent Laue Analyzer Wavelength Dispersive Spectrometer Optical Microscope: 5x to 50x objective with external video system Entrance Slits: typically 250  m X 250mm, accepting ~30% of undulator beam CCD Camera: Bruker area detector

7 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 X-ray Diffraction / Scattering: Determine the crystallographic phases in a sample, study surface and interface structures Quantitative: very precise / accurate determination of crystalline phases Small Spot Size: x-ray beam sizes of a few microns make very small phases visible. Several modes available using synchrotron radiation: X-ray Diffraction and Scattering Single Crystal Diffraction (precise atomic positions) Powder diffraction (phase identification, unit cell refinement) Small / Wide Angle Scattering (nanometer-scale structure) Surface / Interface studies (surface structure)

8 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 X-ray Tomography: x-ray absorption radiography collected at different angles to look in the interior of objects High Resolution: micron-scale 3D volumes can be made of millimeter sized objects. X-ray Absorption Tomography x-rays rotation stage Sample Phosphor Microscope objective CCD camera x-rays Visible light  See “inside” sample: without actually slicing precious or sensitive objects, one can make any “virtual slice” desired. Get full 3d volume: can be put into mathematical models of fluid flow, pore volume connectivity, etc. Get beautiful images: can quickly aide understanding of system. Can get elemental specificity: by going above/below an absorption edge – works for elements at wt% level. Eocene age fossil

9 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 Element Specific: All elements with Z>~14 are visible. It is usually easy to distinguish different elements. X-ray Fluorescence: characteristic x-ray emission lines from de-excitation of electronic core levels for each atom. Natural Samples: samples can be in solution, liquids, amorphous solids, soils, plant roots, surfaces, etc. Low Concentration: concentrations down to ppm level can be seen. Quantitative: precise and accurate elemental abundances can be made. Small Spot Size: measurements can be made on samples down to a few microns in size. Combined with Other Techniques: XRD, XANES, EXAFS X-ray Fluorescence and Microprobe

10 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy: energy- dependence x-ray absorption coefficient  (E) for a core-level electron of an element X-ray Absorption Spectroscopy: XANES and EXAFS Element Specific: Elements with Z>14 can have EXAFS measured EXAFS = Extended X-ray Absorption Fine-Structure XANES = X-ray Absorption Near-Edge Spectroscopy Valence Probe: XANES is sensitive to chemical state and formal valence of selected element. Natural Samples: samples can be in solution, liquids, amorphous solids, soils, plant roots, surfaces, etc. Low Concentration: ~10 ppm for XANES, ~100 ppm for EXAFS. Small Spot Size: XANES and EXAFS measurements can be made on samples down to ~5 microns in size. Local Structure Probe: EXAFS gives atomic species, inter-atomic distance, and number of near-neighbor atoms around a selected element..

11 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 XANES: Oxidation State and Coordination Chemistry X-ray Absorption Near-Edge Spectroscopy (XANES) gives a direct measurement of chemical state and valence state of an element.. For atoms with partially filled d orbitals, the amount of p-d hybridization dramatically changes when the local coordination goes from octahedral to tetrahedral. This gives dramatic changes in XANES, including pre-edge peaks, which are due to unfilled d orbitals that can be filled by an s->p transition only with orbital hybridization. This depends strongly on coordination chemistry and formal oxidation state.

12 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 Nicola Allison, Adrian Finch (Univ of Brighton, Univ of Hertfordshire, UK) The abundance of Sr in aragonite (CaCO 3 ) formed by corals is used to estimate of seawater temperature and composition at formation time. [Sr]/[Ca] ~ T XRF MAPS of a section of the coral were made at 5  m resolution. Sr and Ca fluorescence (and other trace elements) were measured simultaneously at each pixel with a multi-element solid-state detector. The Sr and Ca maps show incomplete correlation and substantial variations in [Sr]/[Ca] on length scales consistent with a diurnal growth cycle. 300  m Ca Sr Sr XAFS was measured at a spot with high [Sr] -- above the solubility limit of Sr in aragonite. 200  m Strontium Paleothermometer in Coral: XRF SEM images of Night growth (Left) and Daytime growth (Right)

13 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 Since the Sr concentration was above its solubility limit (~1%) in aragonite, it was not known if Sr would precipitate out into strontianite (SrCO 3 : a structural analog of aragonite), or remain in the aragonite phase. First shell EXAFS is same for both strontianite and aragonite: 9 Sr-O bonds at ~2.5A, 6 Sr-C at ~3.0A. Second shell EXAFS clearly shows Sr-Ca (not Sr-Sr) dominating, as shown at left by contrast to SrCO 3 data, and by comparison to simulated EXAFS spectrum of Sr substituted into aragonite. The coral traps Sr in thermodynamically- unfavorable aragonite structure, even at super-saturated concentrations. Strontium Paleothermometer in Coral: EXAFS Nicola Allison, Adrian Finch (Univ of Brighton, Univ of Hertfordshire, UK)

14 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 How is Ni taken up, transported, and stored in the hyperaccumulating species Alyssum murale (mustard family)? Can we improve our basic understanding of phytoremediation, and hopefully optimize it? Samples were grown both hydroponically and in Ni enriched soils. Alyssum murale D. Sparks, D. McNear, E. Peltier, U. of Delaware Metal Uptake in Ni Hyperaccumulating Plants fluorescence detector Transmission detector x focused x-ray beam Sample  rotation and translation stages fluoresced x-rays Fluorescence Tomography: Fluorescence tomography allows us to measure metal distribution in the interior of plant material without physically slicing the plant.

15 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 Leaf: Ni is in epidermal cells and veins but not in mesophyll cell. Zn is in the veins and exterior walls. Stem: Ni is in epidermis, pith and other ground tissues. The phloem side of vascular bundles has little Ni, the xylem is enriched in Ni. Zn is at the interface of the epidermis and vascular system. Root: Ni, Zn, and Fe are all present on root exterior in dried roots, and seen in the interior of wet roots. X-ray Tomography Results for Alyssum Murale Virtual slices through alyssum murale grown in Ni-enriched soil D. Sparks, D. McNear, E. Peltier, et al., U. of Delaware

16 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 Sample: single crystal wafer of (1-102)  -Fe 2 O 3, 0.5mm thick, fully hydrated, clean, and then with 100  M Pb sorbed on the surface. Surface Scattering, the hematite surface Surface x-ray diffraction: A surface disrupts the infinite 3D lattice that make Bragg diffraction spots, and moves diffraction intensity to lines “between the Bragg points”. The q-dependence and shape of these crystal truncation rods is sensitive to the roughness and atomic arrangement at the crystal surface. P. Eng, S. Ghose (U. Chicago), T. Trainor (U Alaska, Fairbanks) sample Q L K H

17 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 Surface Structure of Fe 2 O 3 : CTR Results CTR data for hydrated (1 -1 0 2) Fe 2 O 3 surface with two structural models: Bulk termination Missing Fe termination P. Eng, S. Ghose (U. Chicago), T. Trainor (U Alaska, Fairbanks) The bulk termination gives a poor fit, and removing one Fe from the termination gives a much better match to the measurement.

18 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 Surface Structure of (1-102)Fe 2 O 3 with 100  M Pb P. Eng, S. Ghose (U. Chicago), T. Trainor (U Alaska, Fairbanks) Pb(II) sorption isotherms on the hematite (1-102) surface: Facet-specific adsorption curves can be measured. CTR data gives the structure of the “ordered” adsorption complexes and fractional site occupancy Such experimental adsorption isotherms give facet-specific binding energies that can be compared to calculations. 100  M Pb(II) Acid washed Unreacted L (r.l.u.)

19 GeoSoilEnviroCARS, The University of Chicago 16-Oct-2005 X-ray Applications for Geo/Environmental Sciences G. E. Brown, Jr. and N. Sturchio identified these important issues in low-temperature geochemistry and environmental science: From: An Overview of Synchrotron Applications in Low Temperature Geochemistry and Environmental Science. Reviews of Mineralogy & Geochemistry (vol 49, 2002):  In-situ studies, e.g. in the presence of water, water vapor, biota, … are critical.  Molecular-level speciation of trace environmental contaminants are necessary for understanding their behavior.  Complex natural systems and model systems must be studied in parallel.  Complementary characterization and modeling methods are necessary.  The nature of solid/water interface and sorbed species must be known.  Molecular mechanisms of bio- and phyto-remediation must be understood. Synchrotron x-ray techniques are powerful tools for addressing these issues.


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