ORCID Identifier(s)

0000-0003-2233-7248

Graduation Semester and Year

2015

Language

English

Document Type

Thesis

Degree Name

Master of Science in Earth and Environmental Science

Department

Earth and Environmental Sciences

First Advisor

Andrew Hunt

Abstract

Analysis of the constituent mineral components of surface dusts/soils from Chad-Niger region, North Africa, was undertaken by computer controlled scanning electron microscopy (CCSEM) to determine if differences in composition could be used for source attribution to distinguish windblown material from different contributing source areas. A total of 11 surficial samples were selected for analysis by computer controlled scanning electron microscopy (CCSEM). These samples were from two different geographic locations in the Chad-Niger region. CCSEM analysis generates data on individual dust particles that includes: particle size, shape, and chemical composition. This type of particle characterization used a Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) working in the Backscattered Electron Imaging (BEI) mode. The BEI mode of imaging of microscopic dust particles provided information on particle morphology, and average atomic number composition. Element data on Individual particles was provided by a Silicon Drift X-ray detector with an ultra-thin window. The principal goal of this project was to assess whether surface dusts, at the individual particle level, from two different locations in the Chad-Niger region of North Africa, could be satisfactorily differentiated. The mineralogy of the individual particles from the dust samples was determined by CCSEM. CCSEM analysis provides data on thousands of particles in a time efficient manner. Consequently statistically significant sized data sets can be evaluated. With surface soils/dust particles it is typically unhelpful in CCSEM analysis to define specific mineral particle types. Certainly, obdurate minerals such as quartz can often be recognized in CCSEM data (Particles composed wholly of Si). However, transformation processes, like the formation of Fe coats on particles, alters the composition of basic mineral forms in terms of the chemical composition identified in the SEM. To provide a realistic classification of the particles analyzed here. A reference data set from the analysis of a North African surface dust sample was used to develop a classification scheme. An assisted cluster analysis was used to identify homogenous groups of particles within the reference data set. Homogenous groups of particles were based on associations of the constituent particle elements. The homogenous groups were assembled into a 59-class element-based classification scheme. The classes were listed in a linear sorting order that was used to classify the CCSEM data from the samples investigated in this study. The study sample CCSEM analysis typically contained element and other data on approximately 4,000 particles per sample.

Keywords

Mineralogy, Scanning Electron Microscopy

Disciplines

Earth Sciences | Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Comments

Degree granted by The University of Texas at Arlington

25495-2.zip (5410 kB)

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