Abstract

This paper comprises a review of the rapidly expanding application of nanoscale mineral characterization methodology to the study of ore deposits. Utilising bismuth sulphosalt minerals from a reaction front in a skarn assemblage as an example, we illustrate how a complex problem in ore petrology, can be approached at scales down to that of single atoms. We demonstrate the interpretive opportunities that can be realised by doing this for other minerals within their petrogenetic contexts. From an area defined as Au-rich within a sulphosalt-sulphide assemblage, and using samples prepared on a Focused Ion Beam–Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) platform, we identify mineral species and trace the evolution of their intergrowths down to the atomic scale. Our approach progresses from a petrographic and trace element study of a larger polished block, to high-resolution Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) and High Angle Annular Dark Field (HAADF) Scanning-TEM (STEM) studies. Lattice-scale heterogeneity imaged in HAADF STEM mode is expressed by changes in composition of unit cell slabs followed by nanoparticle formation and their growth into “veins”. We report a progressive transition from sulphosalt species which host lattice-bound Au (neyite, lillianite homologues; Pb-Bi-sulphosalts), to those that cannot accept Au (aikinite). This transition acts as a crystal structural barrier for Au. Fine particles of native gold track this progression over the scale of several hundred microns, leading to Au enrichment at the reaction front defined by an increase in the Cu gradient (several wt %), and abrupt changes in sulphosalt speciation from Pb-Bi-sulphosalts to aikinite. Atom-scale resolution imaging in HAADF STEM mode allows for the direct visualisation of the three component slabs in the neyite crystal structure, one of the largest and complex sulphosalts of boxwork-type. We show for the first time the presence of aikinite nanoparticles a few nanometres in size, occurring on distinct (111)PbS slabs in the neyite. This directly explains the non-stoichiometry of this phase, particularly with respect to Cu. Such non-stoichiometry is discussed elsewhere as defining distinct mineral species. The interplay between modular crystal structures and trace element behaviour, as discussed here for Au and Cu, has applications for other mineral systems. These include the incorporation and release of critical metals in sulphides, heavy elements (U, Pb, W) in iron oxides, the distribution of rare earth elements (REE), Y, and chalcophile elements (Mo, As) in calcic garnets, and the identification of nanometre-sized particles containing daughter products of radioactive decay in ores, concentrates, and tailings.

Highlights

  • Textural and compositional variation in minerals over large scales of observation provides valuable information that can assist interpretation of how fluid-rock interaction takes place, or how ore deposits are formed

  • Procedures and problems encountered with applications of Focused Ion Beam (FIB)-Scanning Electron Microscopy (SEM) and Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM) techniques are discussed at length in a number of key publications [1,2,3,4,5,6,7]

  • Contemporary Focused Ion Beam-SEM (FIB-SEM) platforms are equipped with X-ray detectors for acquisition of Energy Dispersive Spectra (EDS), and have Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy (STEM)

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Summary

Introduction

Textural and compositional variation in minerals over large scales of observation provides valuable information that can assist interpretation of how fluid-rock interaction takes place, or how ore deposits are formed. Microscopy (TEM) techniques to mineralogical problems over the past 50 years, it is only within the last 15 years that TEM investigation of minerals in their petrogenetic context has become relatively commonplace This has largely occurred through the advent of Focused Ion Beam (FIB)-Scanning. Whether from natural or synthetic mineral assemblages, the many opportunities facilitated by FIB-SEM extraction of TEM samples from sites of specific petrogenetic interest is exemplified by the diversity of petrological topics addressed in the literature These range from biomineralisation [17,18], to rock-forming silicates such as feldspars [11,19,20], natural and synthetic garnets Long-range superstructuring assists incorporation of heavy elements (U, Pb, W, and Mo) in high-U hematite [36], and no lattice scale changes are observed in high-(Pb, REE + Y) uraninite [37], in both cases the oscillatory zoning appears to be a self-induced patterning phenomenon that locks in the daughter isotopes formed during alpha decay events

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