Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1888862 Radiation Measurements 2007 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The effect of the presence of feldspars that can be shown to exhibit anomalous fading is investigated using the double-SAR protocol. This protocol has been suggested as a method of isolating an optically stimulated luminescence (OSL) signal dominated by quartz from a polymineralic mixture of grains. The progressive removal of feldspars from the silt-sized fraction of sediments from Bignell Hill, Nebraska, is also investigated using chemical treatment with hydrofluorosilicic acid for different durations; the appropriate treatment duration for these sediments is identified as being 7 days. For untreated material, the double-SAR protocol yields IRSL and [post-IR] OSL signals that are both dominated by feldspars and that give the same value for the equivalent dose (De)(De) determination. However, for material treated with hydrofluorosilicic acid for 7 days, the IRSL and [post-IR] OSL signals have distinctly different characteristics and appear to be dominated by feldspar and by quartz, respectively. Furthermore, the DeDe values determined for the feldspar-dominated IRSL signal are about half those obtained for the quartz-dominated [post-IR] OSL signal. This demonstrates that the double-SAR protocol is not always capable of isolating a quartz-dominated signal; clearly, in some circumstances it is necessary to apply a chemical pre-treatment to remove the contribution from feldspars prior to any luminescence measurements being made.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Radiation
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