9:45 AM - 10:00 AM
[SEM13-04] Single-domain particles of ε-Fe2O3 in red-brown obsidians
Keywords:rock magnetism, Raman spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, magnetic hysteresis
ε-Fe2O3 is a magnetic material with a huge coercivity exceeding 1 T at room temperature, and a single phase of tens of nanometers was first synthesized in the 2000s. It has also been found in archeological artifacts and scoriae and was recognized as a new mineral, luogufengite, in 2016. Although ε-Fe2O3 is easily identified by its low Curie temperature (< 210°C), archeological artifacts and scoriae show large but constricted magnetic hysteresis loops, indicating the coexistence of ε-Fe2O3 and other magnetic minerals. In this study, bulk red–brown obsidian samples from several localities were examined by X-ray diffraction and Raman microscopy, and magnetic hysteresis curves were unmixed to obtain hysteresis properties of a single phase ε-Fe2O3. Rietveld analysis was performed on the X-ray diffraction data of red-brown obsidians, and it was found that ε-Fe2O3 and α-Fe2O3 (hematite) were present in a volume ratio of 1:2 to 1:3. Raman spectra showed that α-Fe2O3 predominated in the reddish-brown obsidians, but ε-Fe2O3 of a few μm was identified, and the presence of Fe3O4 (magnetite) was also confirmed. Low-temperature magnetic hysteresis loops were obtained on reddish brown chips, and unmixing was performed to separate the loops into three components. The component with the highest coercivity has a coercivity greater than 1 T at room temperature and reaches its maximum value at about 200 K. Mr/Ms is almost constant at 0.5, independent of temperature. This hysteresis property is consistent with the synthesized ε-Fe2O3, indicating that red-brown obsidians contain uniaxially anisotropic single-domain particles of ε-Fe2O3.