Crystallographic Methods for Non-destructive Characterization of Mineral Inclusions in Diamonds
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2022
Abstract:
The mineralogy and chemical compositions of inclusions in diamonds are the primary
source of information about the environment in which diamonds grow and help constrain the
mechanisms of their growth. However, the vast majority of the information about inclusions
has been gathered by extracting them from their diamonds, thus destroying all possibility
of obtaining further information about the diamond-inclusion system as a whole with new
experimental probes unavailable at the time of extraction. One such specific example is the
recent discovery by X-ray tomography and in situ spectroscopy of the hydrous silicic fluid film
that appears to be ubiquitous around silicate inclusions in lithospheric diamonds (Nimis et al.
2016); the films escaped detection in a multitude of analyses during more than 70 years of
research involving the extraction of many thousands of such inclusions. Inclusions in diamond
are under compressive stress as a result of their encapsulation at depth and ascent of the
diamond to the Earth's surface; extraction also destroys this stress and thus prevents the depth
of entrapment from being determined from the stress state by elastic geobarometry. The stress
release on extraction can also lead to the phase changes and/or conversion of the inclusion to a
powder (e.g., Joswig 2011). For inclusions from diamonds suspected as being from super-deep
sources, extraction therefore risks the loss of rare or possibly unique samples. Non-destructive
characterization of inclusions in diamonds should therefore be made in situ whenever possible.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
non-destructive characterization;
Elenco autori:
Angel, ROSS JOHN
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