Raman Excitation Laser Effects on Peak Parameters and Peak Metamorphic Temperatures of Primitive Carbonaceous Chondrites

MicroRaman (µRaman) spectroscopy is often regarded as a non-destructive technique, utilized to analyze limited materials, both terrestrial and extraterrestrial. Carbonaceous chondrite meteorites are of particular interest but they are dark (low albedo) materials, and thus absorb the majority of inci...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: LeBleu-DeBartola, Amy
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: STARS 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://stars.library.ucf.edu/etd2020/1038
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/context/etd2020/article/2037/viewcontent/CFE0009009.pdf
Description
Summary:MicroRaman (µRaman) spectroscopy is often regarded as a non-destructive technique, utilized to analyze limited materials, both terrestrial and extraterrestrial. Carbonaceous chondrite meteorites are of particular interest but they are dark (low albedo) materials, and thus absorb the majority of incident visible light. Raman excitation lasers can induce considerable localized heating, even when low laser powers are used. It has been previously suggested to utilize low power lasers of =0.4 mW to minimize damaging carbonaceous samples in several fields, including Meteoritics, Geology, Chemistry, and Paleontology. Peak Metamorphic Temperatures (PMT) experienced by the meteorite can be estimated from Raman fitting parameters related to the Graphitic (G) and Disordered (D) carbon bands for carbonaceous material; such Raman thermometers are assumed to be highly reproducible and non-destructive, making them advantageous for the analysis of small, precious samples. We performed Raman analyses of Murchison (CM2), Allende (CV3), Tagish Lake (C2), and Jbilet Winselwan (CM2) meteorites with an excitation wavelength of 514.5 nm and varying irradiances. We show that the derived band positions and widths utilized to characterize PMT from Raman spectra are highly sensitive to the power of the excitation laser used with permanent changes observed even for the lowest laser power used in this study (0.15 mW coupled to a 20x magnification objective). In addition, we evidence different types of damage, whereby low irradiances can cause enough heating that some small, volatile organics are removed, and high irradiances cause the destruction of weak bonds in the Kerogen-like organic matrix. These effects imply that typical Raman instrument's lowest power settings damage the sample, at minimum by heating the sample and changing the thermometry, but also likely by changing the total amount of organics present, which may cause significant variations in the derived PMTs reported across different laboratories or over repeated irradiation of ...