Multi‐Band Raman Analysis of Radiation Damage in Zircon for Thermochronology: Partial Annealing and Mixed Signals

Abstract Four zircon Raman bands were previously calibrated to give consistent estimates of the accumulated self‐irradiation α‐dose in unannealed volcanic samples. Partial annealing of radiation damage produces inconsistent values because of differences in the relative annealing sensitivities. The d...

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Main Authors: Birk Härtel, Raymond Jonckheere, Lothar Ratschbacher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022-01-01
Series:Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GC010182
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author Birk Härtel
Raymond Jonckheere
Lothar Ratschbacher
author_facet Birk Härtel
Raymond Jonckheere
Lothar Ratschbacher
author_sort Birk Härtel
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Four zircon Raman bands were previously calibrated to give consistent estimates of the accumulated self‐irradiation α‐dose in unannealed volcanic samples. Partial annealing of radiation damage produces inconsistent values because of differences in the relative annealing sensitivities. The damage estimates based on the external rotation band (DER) at ∼356 cm−1 and that based on the ν2(SiO4) band (D2) at ∼438 cm−1 are the most and least sensitive to damage annealing. The D2/DER‐ratio thus provides a numerical estimate of the extent of geologic annealing that a zircon sample has experienced. This ratio characterizes the thermal history of a zircon sample but also its state of radiation damage during the course of its geologic history, and thus the manner in which this state influences other thermochronologic methods. Meaningful interpretation of the zircon Raman age requires that the spectra are free of measurement artifacts. The major artifacts result from micrometer‐scale gradients of the damage densities within a zircon grain due to uranium and thorium zoning. The micrometer‐sized sampled volume may span different densities, producing overlapping spectra, causing apparent peak broadening, overestimated damage densities, and zircon Raman ages. The D3/D2‐ratio of the damage densities calculated from the ν3(SiO4) and ν2(SiO4) bands, most and least affected by overlap, is an efficient indicator of a meaningless signal. It reveals overlap in annealed and unannealed samples, because the used bands have similar responses to annealing. Multi‐band Raman maps can be converted to damage‐ratio maps for screening zircon mounts, and selecting spots for thermochronologic investigations.
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spelling doaj.art-293c37270e9542a588df59243a43449d2023-11-03T17:01:12ZengWileyGeochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems1525-20272022-01-01231n/an/a10.1029/2021GC010182Multi‐Band Raman Analysis of Radiation Damage in Zircon for Thermochronology: Partial Annealing and Mixed SignalsBirk Härtel0Raymond Jonckheere1Lothar Ratschbacher2Geologie TU Bergakademie Freiberg Freiberg GermanyGeologie TU Bergakademie Freiberg Freiberg GermanyGeologie TU Bergakademie Freiberg Freiberg GermanyAbstract Four zircon Raman bands were previously calibrated to give consistent estimates of the accumulated self‐irradiation α‐dose in unannealed volcanic samples. Partial annealing of radiation damage produces inconsistent values because of differences in the relative annealing sensitivities. The damage estimates based on the external rotation band (DER) at ∼356 cm−1 and that based on the ν2(SiO4) band (D2) at ∼438 cm−1 are the most and least sensitive to damage annealing. The D2/DER‐ratio thus provides a numerical estimate of the extent of geologic annealing that a zircon sample has experienced. This ratio characterizes the thermal history of a zircon sample but also its state of radiation damage during the course of its geologic history, and thus the manner in which this state influences other thermochronologic methods. Meaningful interpretation of the zircon Raman age requires that the spectra are free of measurement artifacts. The major artifacts result from micrometer‐scale gradients of the damage densities within a zircon grain due to uranium and thorium zoning. The micrometer‐sized sampled volume may span different densities, producing overlapping spectra, causing apparent peak broadening, overestimated damage densities, and zircon Raman ages. The D3/D2‐ratio of the damage densities calculated from the ν3(SiO4) and ν2(SiO4) bands, most and least affected by overlap, is an efficient indicator of a meaningless signal. It reveals overlap in annealed and unannealed samples, because the used bands have similar responses to annealing. Multi‐band Raman maps can be converted to damage‐ratio maps for screening zircon mounts, and selecting spots for thermochronologic investigations.https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GC010182zirconradiation damageRaman spectroscopythermochronologyannealingvaluation
spellingShingle Birk Härtel
Raymond Jonckheere
Lothar Ratschbacher
Multi‐Band Raman Analysis of Radiation Damage in Zircon for Thermochronology: Partial Annealing and Mixed Signals
Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
zircon
radiation damage
Raman spectroscopy
thermochronology
annealing
valuation
title Multi‐Band Raman Analysis of Radiation Damage in Zircon for Thermochronology: Partial Annealing and Mixed Signals
title_full Multi‐Band Raman Analysis of Radiation Damage in Zircon for Thermochronology: Partial Annealing and Mixed Signals
title_fullStr Multi‐Band Raman Analysis of Radiation Damage in Zircon for Thermochronology: Partial Annealing and Mixed Signals
title_full_unstemmed Multi‐Band Raman Analysis of Radiation Damage in Zircon for Thermochronology: Partial Annealing and Mixed Signals
title_short Multi‐Band Raman Analysis of Radiation Damage in Zircon for Thermochronology: Partial Annealing and Mixed Signals
title_sort multi band raman analysis of radiation damage in zircon for thermochronology partial annealing and mixed signals
topic zircon
radiation damage
Raman spectroscopy
thermochronology
annealing
valuation
url https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GC010182
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AT raymondjonckheere multibandramananalysisofradiationdamageinzirconforthermochronologypartialannealingandmixedsignals
AT lotharratschbacher multibandramananalysisofradiationdamageinzirconforthermochronologypartialannealingandmixedsignals