Sw. Knipe et al., X-RAY PHOTOELECTRON SPECTROSCOPIC STUDY OF WATER-ADSORPTION ON IRON SULFIDE MINERALS, Geochimica et cosmochimica acta, 59(6), 1995, pp. 1079-1090
Samples of natural pyrrhotite and pyrite were fractured within the ana
lytical chamber of an X-ray photoelectron spectrometer. The pristine m
ineral surfaces were then exposed, in the absence of oxygen, to total
doses of 100, 200, 400, 800, 1400, 28,000, and 300,000 Langmuirs (L) o
f D2O. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopic (XPS) analyses were performed
between each water dose, to investigate the interaction of these iron
sulphide surfaces with water vapour. Recorded Fe and S photoelectron
spectra showed no evidence of oxidation products on either mineral, ev
en at highest D2O doses, nor could an oxide oxygen signal be fitted in
the spectra for either mineral. On pyrrhotite, the O 1s spectra are c
omposed of contributions from dominantly hydroxyl (at 532.0 +/- 0.2 eV
) and subordinate chemisorbed water (at 533.5 +/- 0.2 eV) signals. The
main O 1s peak on pyrite is also formed from hydroxyl (531.0 +/- 0.3
eV) and adsorbed water/hydroxyl (at 532.3 eV) signals. However, some O
1s spectra recorded on pyrite have peaks at anomalously high binding
energies (>535 eV). The anomalous high binding energy species are attr
ibuted to electrically-isolated OH/H2O, as reported elsewhere, and to
liquid-like water, which has not previously been described in the lite
rature. Pyrrhotite and pyrite interact with water via fundamentally di
fferent processes. Pyrrhotite reaction involves the donation of electr
on charge through Fe vacancies, whereas the water species detected on
pyrite interact with the Fe 3d (e(g)) molecular orbital, and it is sug
gested that hydrogen bonding with the disulphide moiety may be importa
nt.