The PGI is not only a consortium of people, projects, and ideas, but also one of facilities in the greater Knoxville metropolitan area, most noteably those at the University of Tennessee (UT) and those available at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL),approximately 25 miles from UT. The facilities available for research include the Electron Microprobe Laboratory and the Laboratory of Analytical Geochemistry, which includes laminar flow benches and fume hoods for mineral separations as well as a new class 100, trace-element chemistry lab. The Institute for Rare Isotope Measurements (IRIM), located at UT's Pellessippi Research Facility 15 miles from the main campus includes gas separation system and three unique mass spectrometers that have been desiged for the analysis of very small quantities of rare-gas isotopes in natural materials. Those facilities at ORNL include the High Flux Isotope Reactor (HFIR) and associated neutron-activation counting lab, and the laboratories in the Analytical Chemistry Division which include an ion microprobe, an inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer, and thermal ionization mass-spectrometers.
Electron Microprobe Laboratory, UT
Mr.
Allan Patchen, Technician
The major analytical
instrument utilized in most, if not all, of the PGI research endeavors
is the electron microprobe. The Department of Geological Sciences
has a Cameca SX-50 microprobe, with four wavelength spectrometers
and and energy dispersive system (EDS). This computer-based instrument
is capable of performing fully automated, non-destructive chemical
analyses on 1-5 micron spots on polished surfaces. The Oxford
Instruments (formerly Link) software on the EDS unit permits detailed
back-scattered electron (BSE) and x-ray digital-imaging analysis
to obtain modal data, as well as various shape values. This imaging
capability has found particular application with lunar resource
(ISRU) beneficiation studies, as well as to addressing the effects
of space Weathering on lunar soils.
Laboratory of Analytical Geochemistry
(LAG), UT
Dr.
Gregory Snyder, Research Associate Professor, working in the Clean
Lab.
The LAG is located in the new Science
and Engineering Research facility adjacent to the Geology Department.
The LAG consists of two distinct portions: 1) a semi-clean laboratory
space for mineral separations that includes a Frantz isodynamic/magnetic
separator, laminar flow benches for mineral picking with binocular
microscopes, and a fume hood dedicated to heavy liquid separations,
and 2) a Class 100 clean lab, for ion exchange, wet-chemical,
separations of trace elements and radiogenic isotopic studies.
Attached to the clean lab is an anteroom for weighing of rock
powders. This clean lab is currently operational with two separate
HEPA-filtered, plexiglass, chemistry work-stations (see photo).
Isotopic analyses are performed in the Division of Analytical
Chemistry at ORNL (30 miles away) on a VG 354 multi-collector
mass-spectrometer. Currently, we are developing protocols for
the analysis of trace-elements (specifically the REE) by isotope
dilution, and Sm-Nd, and Rb-Sr isotopic studies of lunar samples,
meteorites, and terrestrial mantle xenoliths and their constituent
minerals. Protocols for Pb isotopic studies are planned for the
future.
The Institute for Rare Isotope Measurements
(IRIM), UT
The staff at IRIM, left to right: Michael Mobley (MS student
in Physics), Katherine Ocker (PhD student in Geology), Charles
Joyner (IRIM Technician), Karla Kuebler (MS student in Geology)
and Norbert Thonnard (IRIM Director). The time-of-flight noble
gas mass spectrometer and some of its associated laser system
is in the foreground.
The Institute for Rare Isotope Measurements (IRIM), UT was
established in 1993 to provide the research facilities and collaborative
environment to further develop and to initiate new research opportunities
by utilizing the nascent ultra-sensitive analytical technique
based on resonance ionization. Research at IRIM is currently concentrating
on isotope measurements of extremely small krypton and xenon
noble gas samples. The technique has already demonstrated
detection limits (for Kr-85) of less than 100 atoms, and isotopic
discrimination (for Kr-81) of one part in 1013, opening new research
opportunities in fields as diverse as particle physics, hydrogeology,
glaciology and astrophysics.
Collaborators include members of the departments of Geological
Sciences, Physics and Astronomy, and Environmental Engineering
at UT, more than a dozen universities and research institutions
in the US, and researchers at five foreign institutions. IRIM
is funded with grants from NASA, NSF, DOE and JPL, and by research
incentive awards from the Science Alliance and the Office of Research
at UT.
Facilities include a gas separation system for efficient extraction
of parts-per-million krypton samples from 0.1 to 10 liters of
air, two specialized static mass spectrometers for reducing interfering
isotopes in the sample, a resonance ionization laser system that
can be tuned to krypton and xenon, or most elements in the periodic
table, and a unique static time-of-flight noble gas mass spectrometer.
Other equipment includes a residual gas analyzer system for gas
separation system development and vacuum leak detection, a high-vacuum
evaporator for preparing clean films for sample storage and calibrators,
and the usual profusion of electronic, vacuum and mechanical test
equipment found in a mass spec lab. When fully operational by
mid-1998, IRIM will be the only laboratory world-wide capable,
for example, of dating 200,000 year-old polar ice with Kr-81,
or making Kr and Xe isotope measurements using the few thousand
atoms available in micron-sized interstellar dust grains.
High-Flux Isotope Reactor (HFIR), ORNL
The HFIR and associated neutron-activation counting facilities
offer unique opportunities to collaborate with physicists and
chemists who are actively involved in trace-element analyses of
a variety of earth materials. This facility includes two pneumatic
tubes, one with a thermal neutron flux of 4 x 1014 n cm-2 s-1,
which is the highest flux available to a pneumatic tube in the
world. Such a high flux allows routine analysis of elements that
are not possible with other reactors. Two PC-based gamma spectrometers,
and six Ge detectors (four coaxial, one well, one x-ray) are available
for counting. Approximately 65 elements can be determined at levels
ranging from parts-per-million to parts-per-trillion or below.
If the matrix to be analyzed does not become too radioactive when
activated with neutrons, or if the activity decays quickly, then
groups of trace elements can often be measured simultaneously.
Extremely low quantities of certain elements (such as Ir) can
be measured utilizing microwave digestion facilities available
at ORNL and straightforward chemical separation techniques. Research
and collaboration with Universities and Industry have been a hallmark
of the work at HFIR. Cooperative programs currently exist with
the University of Tennessee, University of Kentucky, Florida A
& M, University of Missouri, and Montana State University.
Among Industry, research has been undertaken with General Electric,
ALCOA, and IBM.
Analytical Chemistry Laboratories,
ORNL
Dr.
Lee Riciputi, Group Leader
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