Reactivity of pyrrhotite (Fe9S10) surfaces: Spectroscopic studies
Literature Information
Yuri Mikhlin, Vladimir Varnek, Igor Asanov, Yevgeni Tomashevich, Alexander Okotrub, Alexander Livshits, Gennady Selyutin, Gennady Pashkov
Synthetic hexagonal pyrrhotite (Fe9S10) etched in hydrochloric acid solution and then dried in air has been studied using ex situ XPS, X-ray fluorescence, Mössbauer, solid-state NMR and EPR spectroscopies. The metal-deficient non-equilibrium, up to several micrometres thick, layer (NL) formed on pyrrhotite under non-oxidative conditions has been found to be composed predominantly of low-spin Fe2+, nearly equal quantities of di- and polysulfide sulphur (probably, chains of 3–5 atoms) and no or low oxygen. When pyrrhotite with the NL is kept in air, singlet ferrous iron converts into high-spin Fe2+ and Fe3+, oxygen is incorporated into the layer and the surface enrichment in sulfur over iron decreases. A Mössbauer signal with an isomer shift of 0.36 mm s−1 and negligible quadruple splitting has been detected for the etched sample, desiccation in air gives rise to a quadruple split of up to 0.65 mm s−1 and a minor decrease in the isomer shift. The application of variable X-ray tube accelerating voltage has made it possible to obtain depth-resolved Fe-Lα,β spectra of the NL and to find several alteration zones which include different forms of iron. Slow oxidative dissolution of the material in 1 M HCl+0.01 M FeCl3 electrolyte produces only a thin NL with mostly O-bonded Fe3+ and polysulfide prevailing over mono- and disulfide species. Subsequent air-drying of this sample results in an increase in the concentrations of oxygen, S-bonded Fe, and mono- and disulfide species, along with S0 formation. No unpaired electron spins have been registered in any of these NL.
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