Exploring the Raman oxygen isotope signatures of calcite and vaterite
- 1Utrecht University, Faculty of Geosciences, Department of Earth Sciences, Utrecht, Netherlands (h.e.king@uu.nl)
- 2Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Institut für Theoretische Physik und Astrophysik, Kiel, Germany
Exploring the Raman oxygen isotope signatures of calcite and vaterite
Oxygen isotope tracers have been increasingly used to differentiate between solid-state and fluid-mediated mineral transformation pathways (e.g., Julia et al. 2023). When 18O enrichment within oxyanion bearing minerals is analysed using Raman spectroscopy, the kinetically hindered formation of different isotopologues can also provide an in-situ timer for these processes (King et al. 2014). However, at present we assume that each isotopologue band in the vibrational spectrum has an equivalent intensity when present at the same concentration within the crystal structure. Here we test this hypothesis by exploring the vibrational spectra of two important oxyanion-bearing minerals, calcite and vaterite. These are polymorphs of CaCO3 and reflect a metastable, transition phase and the thermodynamically most stable mineral expected in many natural systems found at the Earth’s surface.
Here we have used a joint experimental and theoretical approach to demonstrate that isotopic substitution changes both band positions and band intensities to different extents, depending on the vibrational spectroscopy method used and the bands examined. Density functional theory simulations (King et al. 2022) show that for calcite, the most intense Raman bands, the υ1 symmetrical stretching, related to individual isotopologues are found to have very similar intensities and are not affected by changes in isotopologue distribution within the material. Splitting of some bands due to changes in symmetry correlate to observed effects in experimentally produced 18O enriched calcite.In contrast, vaterite vibrational bands were found to change more extensively upon isotope substitution, thus they can only be used to evaluate relative changes in the 18O concentration within the material. These results are expected to contribute to a deeper und less ambiguous understanding of evaluating isotopic enrichment effects in the vibrational spectra of calcium carbonates.
Julia et al. 2023 Chemical Geology, 621, 121364.
King et al. 2014 Crystal Growth & Design, 14, pp. 3910.
King et al. 2022 Crystals, 13, 48.
How to cite: King, H. E. and Živković, A.: Exploring the Raman oxygen isotope signatures of calcite and vaterite, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-12281, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-12281, 2024.