Screening Coarse Airborne Dust for Lead-Rich Phase Occurrence during Characterisation of Particle Mineralogy, Chemistry and Provenance: Application to Deposits in the Vicinity of an Integrated Steelworks
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methodology
- (1)
- absolute and relative areas of pixel groupings, where these groupings refer to
- a.
- individual grains
- b.
- grain populations
- c.
- total grains per sample
- d.
- the corresponding constituent PARC phases for each of (a)–(c)
- (2)
- EDS sum-spectra of these same pixel groupings for quantitative chemical analysis
- (3)
- size and shape information regarding the grains
2.1. Sampling
2.2. Sample Preparation
2.3. Raw Data Acquisition
2.3.1. QXRD
2.3.2. LOM Raw Data Acquisition
2.3.3. SEM-EDS-SI Raw Data Acquisition
2.4. Data Processing with PARC
2.4.1. PARC, General
Phase Model
Grain Segmentation
Grain Population Model
2.4.2. Detection of Pb-Rich Pixels in EDS-SI Data Acquired with 15 kV Accelerating Voltage
Rationale and Definition of Pb-Rich PARC Group
Factors Influencing Sensitivity and Specificity
Physical Meaning of Pb-Rich Pixels and Analytical Results
2.5. Application to NIST Pb-Rich Urban and Indoor Dust Standard Reference Materials
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. General Mineralogy of Ijmond Dust Deposit Samples
3.1.1. Crystalline Phase Proportions from QXRD
3.1.2. PARC Group Abundances and Relationship with QXRD Analyses
3.2. Grain Population Abundances per Sample
3.2.1. Unambiguous Steelworks-Related Populations
3.2.2. Carbon-Rich Populations
3.2.3. Urban Dust Sources
3.2.4. Natural and Mixed Material
3.3. Occurrence of Pb-Rich Phases in Samples
3.3.1. Total Pb-Rich Phase Abundances per Sample
- -
- Pb-rich dominated: grains containing >50 area % Pb-rich pixels and >70 area % when excluding empty spectra pixels. This is a subset of the grain population 111 (Table 1), which captures extremely scarce, discrete grains which in the PARC imagery of the current dataset (specifically) are dominated by Pb-rich pixels with little or no other PARC group present, except for superficial sub-particles or artefacts of grain segmentation.
- -
- The remaining grains (in all populations) containing Pb-rich pixels are subdivided according to the number of Pb-rich pixels they contain, using a geometric binning sequence: 1–4, 5–9, 10–19, 20–39, 40–79, 80–160 and ≥160 Pb-rich pixels.
3.3.2. Distribution of Pb-Rich Pixels over Grain Populations
Overview of Grain Populations’ Pb-Rich Contributions Per Sample
Grains with ≥5 Pb-Rich Pixels
Grains with 1–4 Pb-Rich Pixels
- (1)
- A genuine geochemical association in these samples between S-rich (Pb-poor) and Pb-rich phases, resulting in a certain minimum ratio of Pb-rich pixels to S-rich pixels;
- (2)
3.3.3. Synthesis and Interpretation of Results
Overall Abundances of Detectable Pb-Rich Phases
Distribution of Pb-Rich Phases with Respect to Grains and Grain Populations
Character and Potential Provenance of the Detected Pb-Rich Phase Occurrences
4. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Population # | Source Category # | Source Category | Explanation |
---|---|---|---|
1–15 | 1 | Site—ore | Iron-ore and materials related to ore preparation (sintering and pelletising). General mineralogical characteristics: rich in FeOx ± Ca-ferrites ± C2S |
16 | 2 | Site—ore/hot metal | Particles overwhelmingly dominated by FeOx or Fe-metal (undistinguished): captures both iron-ore particles and droplets of hot metal (pig iron) |
17–53 | 3 | Site—slag | Diverse category of steelmaking process slags, including basic oxygen furnace (BOF) converter, steel ladle treatment and de-sulphurisation slags. General mineralogical characteristics: BOF converter slag is highly calcic material rich in C2S/C3S, C2(A,F) (brownmillerite), magnesio-wustite and oxidation product magnetite, lime/portlandite/calcite and residue after dolomite/doloma. Commonly partially encrusted with sulphate-rich atmospheric weathering products. Steel ladle slag is dominated by Ca-aluminates; de-sulphurisation slag dust by Ca-rich silicates, residue after dolomite and magnesia, and primary sulphates from the process (not weathering products). |
54–55 | 4 | Site—slag; + urban | Particles consistent with blast furnace slag mineralogy, noting that granulated blast furnace slag can also have an immediate urban source as cement construction material. General mineralogical characteristics: dominated by Ca-Mg-Al-silicate phases (melilite or glass) |
56–65 | 5 | Site—flux | Iron- and steelmaking fluxes: (residue after) burnt lime and limestone, dolomite and olivine (forsteritic) |
66 | 6 | Site—flux/slag; + natural | Burnt lime (flux)/limestone (diverse, including flux) /sea-shells (natural): distinguished from the above category by lack of other characteristic steelmaking phases (C2S, Ca-ferrites and FeOx) |
67–68 | 7 | Site—flux/slag | Probable limestone flux residue from iron-ore sintering or pelletising with traces of reaction with FeOx |
69 | 8 | Site—flux/ refractory | Ambiguous category: MgO ± sulphate phases, variously flux from iron- and steelmaking processes and refractory material |
70–72 | 9 | Site— refractory | Likeliest refractory material from steelmaking vessels. General mineralogical characteristics, variously: MgO + spinel; MgO + forsteritic olivine; alumina dominated |
73–75 | 10 | Site—scrap | Zinc-rich material, likely galvanised steel scrap from site (potentially also urban) |
76–78 | 11 | Urban + site—scrap | Fe-metal bearing particles / metallic slivers |
79 | 12 | Site—coal & cokes; + natural + urban | Includes coal/coke material with silicate ash phases, but also organic-rich soil containing the same natural silicate phases. Mineralogical definition: carbon-rich with qz-clay-fsp-mica or FeS or phosphates |
80 | 13 | Site— carbon-rich other | Carbon-rich material with steelmaking phases formed during iron-/steelmaking processes, but also captures spuriously segmented grains (mixing of steelworks-related grains with carbon-rich grains or with background) |
81–82 | 14 | Site— carbon-rich other; + natural + urban | 82: Material with highest carbon / organic content (>90% empty spectra) and lowest content of non-carbon phases such as ash or steelmaking phases. 81: Remaining undifferentiated carbon-rich material (after classification of 79, 80, and 82): may include graphite flakes, organic carbon-based materials and diverse sources |
83–87 | 15 | Urban; rarely site—slag | Particles rich in Ca-silicate (lower P/Si signal ratio) and Ca-(hydr)oxide/carbonate but free of silica: commonly cement/building material, also detected in converter slag reference materials. Ambiguous source category. |
88–99 | 16 | Urban | Diverse urban dust sources. For the current sample set, most significant occurring populations: 88–89: building material (cement/concrete) rich in combinations of silica-Ca-carbonate-Ca-silicates (incl. C2S), lacking key diagnostic steelmaking phases and poorer in P than steelmaking slags with otherwise overlapping mineralogy 94: particles bearing >1% Ba-sulphate. Less a coherent grain population than a flag for high level of surface contamination of other particle types with Ba-sulphate. |
100 | 17 | Natural salt— immediate | NaCl-dominated grains (95% of surface): most commonly other grains with complete covering of sea-salt from maritime influence (sea spray) |
101–103 | 18 | Natural mineral background | Grains with >60% content of natural silicates: quartz, clay, feldspar, mica |
104 | 19 | Natural mineral background mixed with site or urban | Grains with 30–60% of the above natural silicates, with or without the presence of typical steelmaking phases (FeOx, C2S). Population captures: composite particles comprising sub-particles with mixed origin (natural/industrial/urban); and spurious artefacts of grain segmentation (steelworks-related particles merged within the same PARC-grain outline as separate natural silicate particles) |
105–107 | 20 | Natural source— immediate + via site | Miscellaneous other silicate-rich particles and particles rich in apatite. Natural rock-forming minerals, encountered both in immediately naturally sourced materials and as gangue-phases in iron ores (scarce) |
108–110 | 21 | Unknown | Three mineralogically distinctive grain populations of uncertain provenance |
111 | 22 | Pb-rich various | Grains with >40% Pb-rich pixels. Captures both a) discrete particles dominated by Pb-phases (throughout their bulk) and b) particles with a large concentration of Pb-rich pixels reflecting only superficial occurrence of Pb-phases (sub-grains/layering). The sub-population (a) has been counted separately for the current sample set by extra filtering in downstream processing of the PARC results, separately from the grain population model (see Section 3.3.1) |
112–115 | 23 | Unassigned (w/wo partial chloride cover) | Unassigned grains, with / without partial (Na-)chloride covering. 114: otherwise unassigned grains, where these contain ≥1 Pb-rich pixel (implicitly <40%, which is the threshold for classification under population 111) |
SRM Number | Description | Certified Mass Fraction of Pb (mg/kg) |
---|---|---|
1649b [17] | Urban dust | 12,864 ± 62 |
2580 [18] | Powdered Paint (Nominal Mass Fraction of 4% Pb) | 43,400 ± 100 |
2584 [19] | Trace elements in indoor dust (nominal mass fraction of 1% Pb) | 9761 ± 67 |
2587 [20] | Trace elements in soil containing Pb from paint (nominal mass fraction of 3000 mg/kg Pb) | 3242 ± 57 |
SRM Number | 1 | 2 | 3 | Mean | σ | Relative σ (%) | Certified Pb Mass Fraction | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Area % | mg/kg | wt % | ||||||
2580 | 7.04 | 7.06 | 7.20 | 7.10 | 0.09 | 1.29 | 43,400 | 4.34 |
1649b | 2.18 | 2.26 | 2.20 | 2.21 | 0.04 | 1.91 | 12,864 | 1.29 |
2584 | 1.20 | 1.41 | 1.38 | 1.33 | 0.11 | 8.43 | 9761 | 0.98 |
2587 | 0.35 | 0.16 | 0.15 | 0.22 | 0.12 | 52.61 | 3242 | 0.32 |
Pb-Rich Occurrence Category | Number of Grains | % of All Pb-Hosting Grains | % of All Pb-Hosting Grains by Area | % of Total Pb-Rich Pixels |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pb-rich dominated grains | 6 | 0.40 | 0.07 | 12.32 |
≥160 pixels | 10 | 0.66 | 1.34 | 45.05 |
80–159 pixels | 3 | 0.20 | 0.17 | 3.71 |
40–79 pixels | 11 | 0.72 | 0.78 | 6.68 |
20–39 pixels | 14 | 0.92 | 0.94 | 4.35 |
10–19 pixels | 27 | 1.78 | 4.40 | 3.81 |
5–9 pixels | 51 | 3.36 | 4.37 | 3.57 |
1–4 pixels | 1398 | 91.91 | 87.93 | 20.51 |
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Small, J.; van Hoek, C.; van der Does, F.; Seinen, A.-B.; Melzer, S.; Tromp, P.; van der Laan, S. Screening Coarse Airborne Dust for Lead-Rich Phase Occurrence during Characterisation of Particle Mineralogy, Chemistry and Provenance: Application to Deposits in the Vicinity of an Integrated Steelworks. Minerals 2021, 11, 929. https://doi.org/10.3390/min11090929
Small J, van Hoek C, van der Does F, Seinen A-B, Melzer S, Tromp P, van der Laan S. Screening Coarse Airborne Dust for Lead-Rich Phase Occurrence during Characterisation of Particle Mineralogy, Chemistry and Provenance: Application to Deposits in the Vicinity of an Integrated Steelworks. Minerals. 2021; 11(9):929. https://doi.org/10.3390/min11090929
Chicago/Turabian StyleSmall, James, Corrie van Hoek, Frank van der Does, Anne-Bart Seinen, Stefan Melzer, Peter Tromp, and Sieger van der Laan. 2021. "Screening Coarse Airborne Dust for Lead-Rich Phase Occurrence during Characterisation of Particle Mineralogy, Chemistry and Provenance: Application to Deposits in the Vicinity of an Integrated Steelworks" Minerals 11, no. 9: 929. https://doi.org/10.3390/min11090929
APA StyleSmall, J., van Hoek, C., van der Does, F., Seinen, A. -B., Melzer, S., Tromp, P., & van der Laan, S. (2021). Screening Coarse Airborne Dust for Lead-Rich Phase Occurrence during Characterisation of Particle Mineralogy, Chemistry and Provenance: Application to Deposits in the Vicinity of an Integrated Steelworks. Minerals, 11(9), 929. https://doi.org/10.3390/min11090929