2 resultados para Antiferromagnetic spins

em Publishing Network for Geoscientific


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Low-temperature rock magnetic measurements have distinct diagnostic value. However, in most bulk marine sediments the concentration of ferrimagnetic and antiferromagnetic minerals is extremely low, so even sensitive instrumentation often responds to the paramagnetic contribution of the silicate matrix in the residual field of the magnetometer. Analysis of magnetic extracts is usually performed to solve the problems raised by low magnetic concentrations. Additionally magnetic extracts can be used for several other analyses, for example electron microscopy or X-ray diffraction. The magnetic extraction technique is generally sufficient for sediments dominated by magnetite. In this study however, we show that high-coercivity components are rather underrepresented in magnetic extracts of sediments with a more complex magnetic mineralogy. We test heavy liquid separation, using hydrophilic sodium polytungstenate solution Na6[H2W12O40], to demonstrate the efficiencies of both concentration techniques. Low-temperature cycling of zero-field-cooled, field-cooled and saturation isothermal remanent magnetization acquired at room temperature was performed on dry bulk sediments, magnetic extracts, and heavy liquid separates of clay-rich pelagic sediments originating from the Equatorial Atlantic. The results of the thermomagnetic measurements clarify that magnetic extraction favours components with high spontaneous magnetization, such as magnetite and titanomagnetite. The heavy liquid separation is unbiased with respect to high- and low-coercive minerals, thus it represents the entire magnetic assemblage.

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Isolated kerogens from four sites in the Middle Valley hydrothermal region of the Juan de Fuca Ridge (Ocean Drilling Project (ODP) Leg 139) were analysed by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. Measurements of peak width, spin density and power saturation for site 857 kerogens, which increased regularly in maturity downhole, show correlation with vitrinite reflectance values from 0.61 to 2.5%, indicating the start of the oil window at depths from 200 to 400 m. Spin density increases to 1.56 * 10**17 spins per gram and peak width decreases to 3.45 G (gauss) with increasing depth. The tendency to power saturate also decreases with increasing maturity and increasing vitrinite reflectance within the oil window. These trends are consistent with a model in which exchange processes are occurring and cause changes in the EPR behavior of samples from this site. Sediments from other Middle Valley sites, 855, 856 and 858 contain large quantities of pyrite with Mn2+ impurities which interact with the carbon radical to distort the EPR measurements.