Applications of in situ produced cosmogenic 10Be and 26Al for
age determination of rock surfaces and sediments use quartz containing lithologies,
because these nuclides are produced and retained within the crystal lattice of this
mineral. To be able to calculate reliable ages, it is essential to work with pure
quartz grains. The most problematic contaminant is the mineral feldspar for three
reasons: 1) 10Be and 26Al can also be produced in feldspar but
at a different production rate 2) feldspar contains copious amounts of Al and can
thus contribute stable Al (27Al) in high amounts 3) it is ubiquitous and
often intergrown with quartz. This leads to problems during sample processing and
during Accelerator Mass Spectrometry measurement where the rare nuclide 26Al
may reach its detection limit.During sample processing the crushed and sieved rock
samples are subject of physical (magnetic-, shape- and density separation) and chemical
(leaching in acids) cleaning steps in order to remove all minerals (e.g. feldspars,
mica, amphiboles, etc.) and have the quartz grains concentrated and purified. If the
sample is sufficiently clean (i.e. the Al content is below 200 ppm) the purified quartz
can enter total dissolution as the next step of nuclide extraction.Several methods
are used to check the mineralogical composition and the quality of the purified quartz
sample. 1) Optical investigation using a binocular microscope, 2) X-ray diffraction
(XRD) analysis of mineralogy, 3) Al content analysis after digestion and element detection
as high Al content is indicative of the presence of Al containing minerals like feldspars
or mica within the pure quartz fraction.Each of those methods has individual limitations.
Optical investigation may be hindered by the etched surface and quartz may look surprisingly
similar to feldspar after etching. XRD has its detection limit at c. 5%, and with
respect to Al content analysis, some quartz-types may naturally contain larger amounts
of Al. Besides, chemical analysis as well as XRD – if not available in house – may
have a long waiting time and high costs.Here we report first results of exploring
the potential of luminescence as a fast and cost-efficient alternative method to determine
the content of contaminant feldspars in quartz as infrared stimulation only excites
feldspars, but not quartz. The experimental setup consists of a parallel analysis
of the samples using XRD to detect the bulk mineralogy, element analysis by ICP-OES
analysis, and luminescence analyses, in order to develop a short, efficient luminescence
measurement sequence reliably detecting feldspar contamination in samples for cosmogenic
dating. While some results are promising for individual samples, the results for other
samples are still ambiguous. The respective data will be presented at the conference.This
study was supported by the following projects: OMAA 105ou4, NKFIH 124807.