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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: The effects of carbonate concentration and the presence of iron hydroxide phases on the process of arsenic release from an ore material were investigated under experimental oxic conditions and in the pH range from 6.0 to 9.0. These experimental conditions are pertinent to arsenic leaching from tailings and mining wastes. The leaching tests lasted for 〈= 99 days and were performed with materials of five different particle sizes (〈= 2 mm). Carbonate ions were produced in-situ by dolomite dissolution or were contained in used waters (0 to 30 mM as HCO(3)(-)) Iron hydroxide phases were formed in situ by oxidative dissolution of metallic iron (Fe(0)) or pyrite (FeS(2)). Non-disturbed batch experiments and air-homogenized experiments were conducted with a constant amount (10 g/L) of an arsenic-bearing rock (ore material) of a given particle size and different types of water (deionized, tap and mineral water). For comparison, experiments were conducted with 0.1 M EDTA, 0.1 M Na(2)CO(3), and 0.1 M H(2)SO(4). Neither the use of dolomite nor the use of water containing various carbonate (HCO(3)(-)) concentrations could confirm the recent results on the favorable role of As(III)-carbonate complexes on the arsenic transport in the environment. On the other hand, iron hydroxide phases (from Fe(0) and FeS(2)) univocally delayed the As release in both experimental procedures. Furthermore, the theoretically expected effects of the particle size of the ore material was observed. If one takes into consideration that the used HCO(3)(-) concentrations were up to six times larger then those of natural surface waters (〈= 5.5 mM) but up to five times lower than those currently used in the literature (〉= 100 mM), it is concluded that the reported conflicting results for As leaching from sediments may be a misinterpretation of processes occurring in the sediment and yielding increased As release with increasing HCO(3)(-)/CO(3)(2-) concentration.
    Keywords: Carbonate; Native arsenic; Solubilization ; 551
    Language: English
    Type: article , submittedVersion
    Format: 27
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Description: Snow in the environment acts as a host to rich chemistry and provides a matrix for physical exchange of contaminants within the ecosystem. The goal of this review is to summarise the current state of knowledge of physical processes and chemical reactivity in surface snow with relevance to polar regions. It focuses on a description of impurities in distinct compartments present in surface snow, such as snow crystals, grain boundaries, crystal surfaces, and liquid parts. It emphasises the microscopic description of the ice surface and its link with the environment. Distinct differences between the disordered air–ice interface, often termed quasi-liquid layer, and a liquid phase are highlighted. The reactivity in these different compartments of surface snow is discussed using many experimental studies, simulations, and selected snow models from the molecular to the macro-scale. Although new experimental techniques have extended our knowledge of the surface properties of ice and their impact on some single reactions and processes, others occurring on, at or within snow grains remain unquantified. The presence of liquid or liquid-like compartments either due to the formation of brine or disorder at surfaces of snow crystals below the freezing point may strongly modify reaction rates. Therefore, future experiments should include a detailed characterisation of the surface properties of the ice matrices. A further point that remains largely unresolved is the distribution of impurities between the different domains of the condensed phase inside the snowpack, i.e. in the bulk solid, in liquid at the surface or trapped in confined pockets within or between grains, or at the surface. While surface-sensitive laboratory techniques may in the future help to resolve this point for equilibrium conditions, additional uncertainty for the environmental snowpack may be caused by the highly dynamic nature of the snowpack due to the fast metamorphism occurring under certain environmental conditions. Due to these gaps in knowledge the first snow chemistry models have attempted to reproduce certain processes like the long-term incorporation of volatile compounds in snow and firn or the release of reactive species from the snowpack. Although so far none of the models offers a coupled approach of physical and chemical processes or a detailed representation of the different compartments, they have successfully been used to reproduce some field experiments. A fully coupled snow chemistry and physics model remains to be developed.
    Keywords: air, ice, liquids, quasi-liquids, solids; snow ; 551
    Language: English
    Type: article , publishedVersion
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  • 3
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    In:  Scientific Drilling, Basel, Birkhäuser Verlag, vol. 331, no. 1, pp. 105-114, pp. L15S17, (ISBN: 0-12-018847-3)
    Publication Date: 1989
    Keywords: Rock mechanics ; Dearth Core ; Borehole breakouts ; BTI ; cracks and fractures (.NE. fracturing) ; Roeckel ; Rockel
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  • 4
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    Projektleitung Kontinentales Tiefbohrprogramm der Bundesrep. Deutschland im Niedersächsischen Landesamt für Bodenforschung
    In:  Hannover, Projektleitung Kontinentales Tiefbohrprogramm der Bundesrep. Deutschland im Niedersächsischen Landesamt für Bodenforschung, vol. 138, no. 2, pp. 1-14, (ISBN 0-7923-5034-0)
    Publication Date: 1988
    Keywords: scientific drilling ; Borehole geophys. ; Project report/description ; Physical properties of rocks ; Laboratory measurements ; Woehrl ; Wohrl
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  • 5
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    In:  In: Emmermann, R., Wohlenberg, J (eds.), The German Continental Deep Drilling Program (KTB). Berlin, Heidelberg, New York : Springer, pp. 297-362 / also in: Journal of Geophysics 62: 1-30
    Publication Date: 1987
    Keywords: KTB 84, Black Forest, Southern Germany, reflection seismics, refraction seismics, seismic attributes, seismic processing/methodology
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  • 6
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    In:  Professional Paper, Open-File Rept., Tiefbohrung KTB Oberpfalz VB, Ergebnisse der geowiss. Bohrungsarbeiten im KTB-Feldlabor, Teufenbereich von 992 - 1530 m, Hannover, Springer-Verlag, vol. 22, no. 16, pp. D47-D60, (ISBN 0080419208)
    Publication Date: 1988
    Keywords: cracks and fractures (.NE. fracturing) ; Instruments ; Laboratory measurements ; Stress ; Stress measurements ; Acoustic emission ; Woehrl ; Wohrl
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: Distribution functions describing the results of natural processes frequently show the shape of power laws, e.g., mass functions of stars and molecular clouds, velocity spectrum of turbulence, size distributions of asteroids, micrometeorites and also interstellar dust grains. It is an open question whether this behavior is a result simply coming about by the chosen mathematical representation of the observational data or reflects a deep-seated principle of nature. The authors suppose the latter being the case. Using a dust model consisting of silicate and graphite grains Mathis et al. (1977) showed that the interstellar extinction curve can be represented by taking a grain radii distribution of power law type n(a) varies as a(exp -p) with 3.3 less than or equal to p less than or equal to 3.6 (example 1) as a basis. A different approach to understanding power laws like that in example 1 becomes possible by the theory of self-similar processes (scale invariance). The beta model of turbulence (Frisch et al., 1978) leads in an elementary way to the concept of the self-similarity dimension D, a special case of Mandelbrot's (1977) fractal dimension. In the frame of this beta model, it is supposed that on each stage of a cascade the system decays to N clumps and that only the portion beta N remains active further on. An important feature of this model is that the active eddies become less and less space-filling. In the following, the authors assume that grain-grain collisions are such a scale-invarient process and that the remaining grains are the inactive (frozen) clumps of the cascade. In this way, a size distribution n(a) da varies as a(exp -(D+1))da (example 2) results. It seems to be highly probable that the power law character of the size distribution of interstellar dust grains is the result of a self-similarity process. We can, however, not exclude that the process leading to the interstellar grain size distribution is not fragmentation at all. It could be, e.g., diffusion-limited growth discussed by Sander (1986), who applied the theory of fractal geometry to the classification of non-equilibrium growth processes. He received D=2.4 for diffusion-limited aggregation in 3d-space.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: NASA, Ames Research Center, Interstellar Dust: Contributed Papers; p 395-396
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: One of the most certain facts on interstellar dust is that it contains grains with silicon oxygen tetrahedra (SOT), the internal vibrations of which cause the well known silicate bands at 10 and 18 microns. The broad and almost structureless appearance of them demonstrates lack of translation symmetry in these solids that must be considered amorphous or glassy silicates. There is no direct information on the cations in these interstellar silicates and on the number of bridging oxygens per tetrahedron (NBO). Comparing experimental results gained on amorphous silicates, e.g., silicate glasses, of cosmically most abundant metals (Mg, Fe, Ca, Al) with the observations is the only way to investigate interstellar silicate dust mineralogy (cf, Dorschner and Henning, 1986). At Jena University Observatory IR spectra of submicrometer-sized grains of pyroxene glasses (SSG) were studied. Pyroxenes are common minerals in asteroids, meteorites, interplanetary, and supposedly also cometary dust particles. Pyroxenes consist of linearly connected SOT (NBO=2). In the vitreous state reached by quenching melted minerals, the SOT remain nearly undistorted (Si-O bond length unchanged); the Si-O-Si angles at the bridging oxygens of pyroxenes, however, scatter statistically. Therefore, the original cation oxygen symmetry of the crystal (octahedral and hexahedral coordination by O) is completely lost. The blended bands at 10 and 18 microns lose their diagnostic differences and become broad and structureless. This illustrates best the basic problem of interstellar silicate mineral diagnostics. Optical data of glasses of enstatite, bronzite, hypersthene, diopside, salite, and hedenbergite have been derived. Results of enstatite (E), bronzite (B), and hypersthene (H) show very good agreement with the observed silicate features in the IR spectra of evolutionarily young objects that show P-type silicate signature according to the classification by Gurtler and Henning (1986). Compositional parameters and main characteristics of experimental SSG spectra in IR for the glasses E, B, and H are shown in tabular form. Results fit excellently the relations derived by Koike and Hasegawa (1987) and suggest that the band ratio of the astronomical silicate by Draine and Lee (1984) is too low.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: NASA, Ames Research Center, Interstellar Dust: Contributed Papers; p 369-370
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: Closely spaced (cm-scale) traverses through the K-T boundary at Stevns Klint (Denmark), Woodside Creek (New Zealand) and a new Southern Hemisphere site at Richards Bay (South Africa) were subjected to trace element and isotopic (C, O, Sr) investigation. Intercomparison between these data-sets, and correlation with the broad K-T database available in the literature, indicate that the chemistry of the boundary clays is not globally constant. Variations are more common than similarities, both of absolute concentrations, and interelement ratios. For example, the chondrite normalized platinum-group elements (PGE) patterns of Stevns Klint are not like those of Woodside Creek, with the Pt/Os ratios showing the biggest variation. These differences in PGE patterns are difficult to explain by secondary alteration of a layer that was originally chemically homogeneous, especially for elements of such dubious crustal mobility as Os and Ir. The data also show that enhanced PGE concentrations, with similar trends to those of the boundary layers, occur in the Cretaceous sediments below the actual boundary at Stevns Klint and all three the New Zealand localities. This confirms the observations of others that the geochemistry of the boundary layers apparently does not record a unique component. It is suggested that terrestrial processes, eg. an extended period of Late Cretaceous volcanism can offer a satisfactory explanation for the features of the K-T geochemical anomaly. Such models would probably be more consistent with the observed stepwise, or gradual, palaeontological changes across this boundary, than the instant catastrophe predicated by the impact theory.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Lunar and Planetary Inst., Global Catastrophes in Earth History: An Interdisciplinary Conference on Impacts, Volcanism, and Mass Mortality; p 198-199
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: Different types of gravity prediction methods for local and regional gravity evaluation are developed, tested, and compared. Four different test areas were particularly selected in view of different prediction requirements. Also different parts of the spectrum of the gravity field were considered.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Ohio State Univ., Progress in the Determination of the Earth's Gravity Field; p 81-84
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