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Published byBlaise Bernard Ford Modified over 9 years ago
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Identification of minerals with the petrographic microscope
Chapter 10 - A Identification of minerals with the petrographic microscope
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Content Sample preparation Microscope alignment
Determination of the refractive index Use of interference colors Conoscopic observation of interference figures
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Microscopy Transmitted light microscopy Reflected light microscopy
Transparent crystals Light transmits through mineral grains Common rock-forming minerals Reflected light microscopy Opaque crystals Light reflects from highly polished surface Usually ore minerals This course: transmitted light microscopy
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Sample preparation: Transmitted light microscopy
Grain mount: Finely ground fragments; immersed in oil and scattered on glass plate; covered by thin sheet of glass Thin section: Cut slab from rock sample – area of interest Bottom - polished and cemented onto glass slide Top - ground to desired thickness; covered with balsam and thin cover glass Rock-forming minerals now transparent
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Why use a cover glass?
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Microscope alignment Important in order to:
have light going through the center of all lenses, of the stage, the condenser get two polarizers filtering light at vibration directions perpendicular to each other Oculars – one or both adjusted for each eye; cross-hair in focus Stage – center exactly in the optic axis; object not to move during stage rotation Condenser – when switched on light beam should be centered around cross-hair Polarizer – one set at 0º and one at 90º
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Other settings Brightness of light – comfortable for your eyes – very bright will give headaches and burns out filaments Iris – determines the diameter of the light beam coming from the source – different setting for different magnifications Condenser lens – use to get high resolution at high magnification Focusing – to avoid collision: first bring sample close to objective lens (not against) and increase distance until sample in focus
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Determination of the refractive index
Grain mount Edges of crystal – act as small prisms which concentrate light as a ring of light – the Becke line When increasing the distance from sample to objective (defocusing), the Becke line is always refracted in the direction of a medium of higher RI In practice: Change liquids until two adjacent liquids defines the range for the index of the mineral
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Determination of refractive Index
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Birefringence (δ) When a ray of light is split into two separate polarized rays – each with a single vibration direction perpendicular to that of the other ray True maximum birefringence value (δ) of mineral Isotropic: δ = n – n = 0 Uniaxial: δ = nε – nω Biaxial: δ = nγ – nα Under the microscope: Observed under crossed polarized light as: Interference colors Only in anisotropic minerals
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Birefringence/double refraction
Doubly refracted waves are polarized but separate, vibrating in different planes – no interaction Need interference – study interference colours and properties To get interference – a second polarizer inserted – the analyzer: Crossed polarizer/upper polarizer/crossed nichols Used to analyze the interference effects of light in minerals
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Interference colours First order colors Second order colors Third order colors
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Birefringence A characteristic that all anisotropic minerals have, intensity differs High birefringent minerals – third/fourth order interference colours Med birefringent minerals – second order interference colours Low birefringent minerals - first order interference colours For specific mineral birefringence depends on orientation: Maximum birefringence - orientation of grain shows highest possible interference colour for the specific mineral Minimum or no birefringence – orientation of grain shows lowest or no interference colour for specific mineral Intermediate birefringence – orientation of grains shows interference colours intermediate between minimum and maximum
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Interference colours Determine order of colour and so value for birefringence – interference color chart
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Use of interference colors True birefringence
In sample: crystals in random orientations each grain different interference colors, each with corresponding birefringence Minimum birefringence Circular section (perpendicular to optical axis) give lowest order or no interference colours – refractive indices on both axes equal or almost equal Also referred to as the isotropic section True birefringence Longest elliptical section (parallel to optical axis) give highest order colors Refractive index on major axis = largest; on minor axis = smallest THUS: to determine the true birefringence of mineral – choose grain with highest interference colors and read of the value of birefringence from the color chart
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Use of interference colors: Accessory plates (compensators)
Accessory plate is a crystal with known birefringence and orientation Determine unknown mineral optical orientation by comparing with known crystal plate orientation Crystal orientation in plate parallel with mineral orientation Plate colors interfere constructively with colors of mineral Addition – Positive (Red plate + color of mineral = blue) Crystal orientation in plate perpendicular with mineral orientation Plate colors interfere destructively with colors of mineral Subtraction – Negative (Red plate - color of mineral = yellow)
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Use of interference colors: Accessory plates (compensators)
POSITIVE NEGATIVE
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Use of interference colors: Extinction
As an anisotropic crystal is rotated a full turn under crossed polarized light, it goes into extinction 4 times I.e. – at every 90° rotation the mineral goes dark This happens every time the two perpendicular vibrating directions falls parallel with the two polarizer directions
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Use of interference colors: Extinction angle
When optical axis vertical (circular section) – mineral dark during rotation When inclined – mineral go dark once every 90º Angle of extinction can be measured for elongated minerals or minerals with strong cleavage Parallel extinction Inclined extinction Symmetrical extinction No extinction angle
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Observation of interference figures using convergent light – conoscopic view
Insert condenser lens Gives convergent light Enters sample at 50º - 90º angles See image of light source Interference effects at different angles
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Conoscopic observation of interference figures
Isotropic No image
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Conoscopic observation of interference figures
Uniaxial Perpendicular to optical axis
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Conoscopic observation of interference figures
Uniaxial At an angle to the optical axis
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Conoscopic observation of interference figures
Uniaxial Parallel to the optical axis
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