CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf ·...

38
CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart

Transcript of CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf ·...

Page 1: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart

Page 2: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE REVIEW CHAPTER)

� Crystal twinning

� Crystal defects

� Polymorphism and isomorphism

Page 3: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

CONTENT CHAP. 6 (2 LECTURES)

� Part 1: Crystal growing - nucleation and accretion

� Part 2: Introduction to the XRD method

Page 4: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

PART 1- CRYSTAL GROWTH: NUCLEATION AND ACCRETION

Page 5: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

� Environments: vapor phase, fluid phase, solid phase

CRYSTAL GROWTH

Volcanic fumaroles (Kilauea)

Calcite vein Cooling lava

Reaction rim of garnet between plagioclase and

hornblende

Page 6: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

� In order to growth a mineral form a fluid (e.g., magma, water), you need to consider two processes:

� Nucleation

� Transport

+ appropriate P-T conditions

CRYSTAL GROWTH

Page 7: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

CRYSTAL GROWTH

� Three possible conditions for a mineral:

�  Stable

� Metastable

� Unstable

� Activation energy: energy required to transform a metastable mineral to a stable mineral

Page 8: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

KINETICS

� Kinetics = study of reaction rates

� Depend on T, P, composition of the system

� Reactions tend to occur more quickly at higher T’s

� Different elements will diffuse at different rates, which can cause some minerals to become stable while others remain metastable

Page 9: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

� Nucleation: the initiation of crystal growth in a fluid (magma, water, etc..)

CRYSTAL GROWTH

Page 10: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

� Nucleation: the initiation of crystal growth in a fluid (magma, water, etc..)

CRYSTAL GROWTH

� In order for the reaction to occur, the “energy” of the mineral must be lower than the energy of the unbounded ions/atoms in the fluid ( = the mineral must be more stable than the fluid)

Page 11: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

� Nucleation: the initiation of crystal growth in a fluid (magma, water, etc..)

CRYSTAL GROWTH

� In order for the reaction to occur, the “energy” of the mineral must be lower than the energy of the unbounded ions/atoms in the fluid ( = the mineral must be more stable than the fluid)

� The energy of nucleation can be expressed though Gibbs free energy of formation (ΔGf)

Page 12: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

� Determining the Gibbs free energy of formation for a crystal needs to consider both the volume and surface of the precipitating crystal

CRYSTAL GROWTH

1)  Volume energy. Consider a crystal of volume V:

ΔGv = [ΔGf(crystal)-ΔGf(fluid)]V

If ΔGv <0, the crystal is at lower energy and is “stable”: it can precipitate.

Page 13: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

� Determining the Gibbs free energy of formation for a crystal needs to consider both the volume and surface of the precipitating crystal

CRYSTAL GROWTH

2)  Surface energy (=interfacial energy). Consider a crystal of volume V:

ΔGS = γa

where γ is the surface energy per unit area, and a is the area of the crystal.

Page 14: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

� Gibbs free energy of formation:

ΔGf = ΔGv + ΔGs

CRYSTAL GROWTH

� Consider a spherical crystal of radius r:

ΔGf = ΔGv*(4π/3)*r3 + ΔGs*πr2

Page 15: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

NUCLEATION

r*

� r* (or rc): critical radius

� ΔG* (or ΔGc): nucleation energy

� To form crystal you must overcome the nucleation energy barrier (or add nuclei)

Page 16: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

NUCLEATION

r*

� r* (or rc): critical radius

� ΔG* (or ΔGc): nucleation energy

ΔGf = ΔGv*(4π/3)*r3 + ΔGs*πr2

∝r3 ∝r2

Page 17: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

NUCLEATION

r*

� r* (or rc): critical radius

� ΔG* (or ΔGc): nucleation energy

� ΔGf = ΔGv + ΔGs

� Energy required for the nucleation and the growing increase with the surface/volume ratio.

Page 18: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

NUCLEATION � To form crystal you must overcome the nucleation energy

barrier (or add nuclei)

⇔ homogeneous vs. heterogeneous nucleation

The nucleus has to form from a pure fluid reservoir

Dust, other nuclei,… can serve as support for nucleation: requires less energy

Page 19: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

NUCLEATION

� Supercooling

Ex.: Halite in water

Page 20: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

NUCLEATION

� Supercooling

nucleation energy

Page 21: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

NUCLEATION

� Supercooling

solid

Solid

+ liquid

liquid T

X

ΔT

liquidus

solidus

Page 22: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

CRYSTAL GROWTH

� Minimize the surface energy

Fig. 5.10 in Introduction to mineralogy (Nesse)

Page 23: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

CRYSTAL GROWTH

� Minimize the surface energy

Fig. 5.10 in Introduction to mineralogy (Nesse)

Page 24: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

CRYSTAL GROWTH

� Minimize the surface energy

� Three types of surfaces:

� F (=flat)

� S (= Stepped)

� K (=kinked)

Page 25: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

CRYSTAL GROWTH

� the slow growing faces will tend to dominate in the end

Page 26: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

DENDRITIC CRYSTALS

� Crystal growth limited by transport

Page 27: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

ZONED CRYSTALS

� Change of composition during the growth

Element maps showing Ca and Na zonation in plagioclase. source: http://serc.carleton.edu/details/images/8598.html

Page 28: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

OSTWALD RIPENING � This thermodynamically-driven spontaneous process occurs

because larger particles are more energetically favored than smaller particles

2h 6h 24h

Page 29: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

OSTWALD RIPENING � This thermodynamically-driven spontaneous process occurs

because larger particles are more energetically favored than smaller particles

Log(t)

Log

(m

ea

n s

ize

)

t (s)

n

Page 30: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

PART 2: X-RAY DIFFRACTION METHOD

Page 31: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

� X-rays: discovered in 1895 - powerful tool to "see inside" of crystals

� Determination of crystal structure and unit cell sizes

�  Identification of minerals: powder diffraction analyse = simple and inexpensive method for identifying minerals, especially fine-grained minerals

X-RAY DIFFRACTION (XRD)

Page 32: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

� X-rays: ability to penetrate the matter depends on density (Z)

X-RAY DIFFRACTION (XRD)

� X-rays: electromagnetic radiation – λ= 0.02-100 * 10-10 m

�  λ~ atom size

Page 33: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

X-RAY DIFFRACTION (XRD)

X-ray Vacuum Tube Cathode (W)– electron

generator Anode (Mo, Cu, Fe, Co, Cr) –

electron target, X-ray generator

Page 34: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

X-RAY DIFFRACTION (XRD)

� Continuous spectra (white radiation)– range of X-ray wavelengths generated by the absorption (stopping) of electrons by the target

� Characteristic X-rays – particular wavelengths created by dislodgement of inner shell electrons of the target metal; x-rays generated when outer shell electrons collapse into vacant inner shells

Page 35: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

X-RAY DIFFRACTION (XRD)

� Characteristic X-rays �  Kα peaks created by collapse from L to K

shell

� Kβ peaks created by collapse from M to K shell

Page 36: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

BRAGG LAW nλ = 2d sinθ �  if we know λ of the X-rays going in to the crystal, and we can measure the θ of the diffracted X-rays coming out of the crystal, then we know the spacing between the atomic planes.

Page 37: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

POWDER METHOD

� X-ray Tube: can be oriented from 0 to 90° (monochromatic rays)

� Detector: Can be oriented from 0 to 90°

� Gionometer: to orient the crystals

� X-ray intensity plot as function of the angle

� Comparison with the spectra collections: 70,000

Page 38: CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD - Dr. Sarah Lambartsarahlambart.com/teaching/mineralogy-06.pdf · 2017-01-23 · CHAPTER 6: CRYSTAL GROWTH & XRD Sarah Lambart . RECAP CHAP. 5 (SEE

POWDER METHOD

� Ex. Quartz nλ = 2d sinθ ⇔θ = arcsin (nλ / 2d)

λ(Cu) = 1.54Å (anode)

d - Qtz [101] = 3.342

θ = 13.32° ; 2θ = 26.64°