1999
DOI: 10.1029/1999jb900095
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Determination of lattice parameter, oxidation state, and composition of individual titanomagnetite/titanomaghemite grains by transmission electron microscopy

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Cited by 26 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…It is not clear, however, whether this peak originates from titanomaghemite or it is a “contamination signal” due to X‐ray fluorescence from the adjacent silicate minerals (e.g., plagioclase). The latter explanation is consistent with the observation of a comparable peak from Si (Figure 3c); Si is not usually present in significant quantities in natural titanomagnetites [e.g., Creer and Ibbetson , 1970; Zhou et al , 1999]. Assuming that the entire Al signal comes from titanomaghemite, we calculated the maximum degree of Al substitution (0.10 ≤ δ max ≤ 0.16) using the following formula: where (Fe/Al) and (Ti/Al) are the atomic ratios estimated from the quantification of EDS data.…”
Section: Rock Magnetic and Compositional Datasupporting
confidence: 90%
“…It is not clear, however, whether this peak originates from titanomaghemite or it is a “contamination signal” due to X‐ray fluorescence from the adjacent silicate minerals (e.g., plagioclase). The latter explanation is consistent with the observation of a comparable peak from Si (Figure 3c); Si is not usually present in significant quantities in natural titanomagnetites [e.g., Creer and Ibbetson , 1970; Zhou et al , 1999]. Assuming that the entire Al signal comes from titanomaghemite, we calculated the maximum degree of Al substitution (0.10 ≤ δ max ≤ 0.16) using the following formula: where (Fe/Al) and (Ti/Al) are the atomic ratios estimated from the quantification of EDS data.…”
Section: Rock Magnetic and Compositional Datasupporting
confidence: 90%
“…According to the semiquantitative EDS spectra, the Ti content of these particles can reach from 1 to 20% corresponding to a (fresh) Tmt composition of TM3 to TM60 (Figure 3). Averaged over many individual Tmt grains, the mean composition of all sites corresponds approximately to TM30 (Table 2b), which is consistent with the observations for MORB titanomagnetites by Zhou et al [1999Zhou et al [ , 2000.…”
Section: Fragmental and Euhedral Titanomagnetitesupporting
confidence: 78%
“…Cation-deficient spinel ss was previously regarded as ''titanomaghemite'', which is formed by an oxidation process analogous to the formation of maghemite (c-Fe 2 O 3 ) (Basta 1959, Collyer et al 1988, Zhou et al 1999 …”
Section: Direct Exsolution Of Ilmenitementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A minor amount of cationic vacancies (A) can also be present in cationdeficient spinel ss (Collyer et al 1988, Senderov et al 1993, Lattard et al1995, Zhou et al 1999. Spinel ss in mafic-ultramafic intrusive rocks would experience intensive sub-solidus re-equilibration on slow cooling (Frost & Lindsley 1991), resulting in various types of exsolution in Ti-rich magnetite.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%