RM - Artigos em revistas internacionais
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Browsing RM - Artigos em revistas internacionais by Subject "Absorção de raios X"
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- An insight into the firing conditions of Chinese blue-and-white porcelain through XANESPublication . Coutinho, ML; Veiga, JP; Ruivo, Andreia; Silva, Teresa; Salas-Colera, Eduardo; Bottura Scardina, Silvia; Lima, Augusta; Figueiredo, Elin; Cotte, Marine; Lima, M.M.R.A.ABSTRACT: Chinese blue-and-white porcelain is found in archaeological excavations worldwide, being significant evidence of global trade routes and cultural exchange. Synchrotron radiation-based techniques have been applied for studying cobalt speciation to establish a correlation between the cobalt and iron oxidation state and local coordination environment in the rich blue shades of Chinese blue-and-white porcelain. However, the relationship between the firing atmosphere conditions and the speciation of cobalt has not been established yet. In this study, underglaze blue models were produced and fired in air or under reducing atmospheres to ascertain the effect of the firing atmosphere in cobalt and iron speciation. The experimental results were compared with data obtained on historical samples of ancient porcelain shards. The microstructure and colour of the produced underglaze blue models were investigated by variable pressure scanning electron microscopy (VP-SEM-EDS), using a hyperspectral imaging camera (Vis-SWIR reflectance spectroscopy) and colorimetry. The formal valence and coordination of cobalt and iron ions of the glaze were determined by X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS), particularly X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES), using synchrotron radiation. Spectral features demonstrated that both cobalt and iron speciation were affected by the firing atmosphere and therefore could be used to ascertain the firing atmosphere.
- Indium-carrier minerals in polymetallic sulphide ore deposits : a crystal chemical insight into an indium binding state supported by X-ray absorption spectroscopy dataPublication . Figueiredo, M. Ondina; Silva, Teresa; de Oliveira, Daniel Pipa Soares; Rosa, Diogo
- Molybdenite as a rhenium carrier : first results of a spectroscopic approach using synchrotron radiationPublication . Silva, Teresa; Figueiredo, M. Ondina; de Oliveira, Daniel Pipa Soares; Veiga, JP; Batista, Maria JoaoThe chemical and physical properties of rhenium render it a highly demanded metal for advanced applications in important industrial fields. This very scarce element occurs mainly in ores of porphyry copper-molybdenum deposits associated with the mineral molybdenite, MoS2, but it has also been found in granite pegmatites and quartz veins as well as in volcanic gases. Molybdenite is a typical polytype mineral which crystal structure is based on the stacking of [S-Mo-S] with molybdenum in prismatic coordination by sulphide anions; however, it is not yet clearly established if rhenium ions replace Mo4+ cations in a disordered way or else, if such replacement gives rise to dispersed nanodomains of a rhenium-rich phase. As a contribution to clarify this question, an X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XANES) study using synchrotron radiation was performed at the Re L3-edge of rhenium-containing molybdenite samples. Obtained results are described and discussed supporting the generally accepted structural perspective that rhenium is mainly carried by molybdenite through the isomorphous replacement of Mo, rather than by the formation of dispersed Re-specific nanophase(s).
- Selenium speciation in waste materials from an exhausted Iberian Pyrite Belt minePublication . Figueiredo, M. Ondina; Silva, Teresa; Veiga, JP; Batista, Maria Joao; Salas-Colera, Eduardo; de Oliveira, Daniel Pipa SoaresSelenium is an essential nutrient for humans, animals and microorganisms, but it becomes toxic at concentrations slightly above the nutritional levels. This naturally occurring trace element can be released to the environment from various anthropogenic sources such as mining, agricultural, petrochemical and industrial processes and its toxicity is developed along a complex cycle involving adsorption by soil components and subsequent accumulation by plants. In the environment, selenium can occur in several oxidation states ranging from selenide (Se=) to elemental selenium (Se0), selenite (Se4+) and selenate (Se6+). Selenium contents above 900 ppm were recently assigned in mine wastes from the sulphur factory at the São Domingos exhausted pyrite mine exploited in the Iberian Pyrite Belt (south Portugal) since Roman times until 1966. Aiming at a sustainable remediation of this mining site, an X-ray absorption spectroscopy study using synchrotron radiation, combined with X-ray diffraction, was undertaken to clarify the speciation state of selenium and the nature of Se-carrier phase(s). The results show that selenium does not significantly replace sulphur under the form of selenate in the dominant sulphate phases and occasionally remains as a substituting selenide anion in debris of the original sulphides present in the mine waste materials.
- Towards the recovery of by-product metals from mine wastes : an X-Ray absorption spectroscopy study on the binding state of rhenium in debris from a centennial Iberian Pyrite Belt minePublication . Figueiredo, M. Ondina; Silva, Teresa; Veiga, JP; de Oliveira, Daniel Pipa Soares; Batista, Maria JoaoRhenium is a very scarce element, occurring in the Earth's crust mainly carried by molybdenite (MoS2). Due to a very low availability comparative to actual industrial demand, rhenium is nowadays one of the most expensive mineral commodities and an increased interest is focused on exploring residues resulting from a long-term mining, particularly of sulphide ore deposits. It is therefore noteworthy to assign the presence of rhenium (in a concentration up to 3 ppm) in the waste materials from the old sulphur factory at the abandoned mine of São Domingos (Iberian Pyrite Belt, Southeast Portugal), exploited since the Roman occupation of Iberia. Aiming at a potential sustainable recovery of rhenium as a by-product, X-ray near-edge absorption spectroscopy (XANES) was applied to clarify the Re-binding and mode of occurrence by comparing Re L3-edge XANES spectra obtained from mine waste samples (previously fully characterized by X-ray laboratory techniques) with similar spectra collected from Re-rich molybdenites (Mo1-xRexS2) and from Re-O model compounds configuring various valences and coordination environments of rhenium ions. Obtained results are commented, ruling out a possible Re-S binding and rather conforming with the binding of rhenium to oxygen in the analysed mine waste materials.