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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12128/14626
Title: Greenockite Whiskers from the Bytom Burned Coal Dump, Upper Silesia, Poland
Authors: Nowak, Katarzyna
Galuskina, Irina
Galuskin, Evgeny
Keywords: greenockite; whisker; bismuth drop; VLS mechanism; VQS mechanism; coal dump; Bytom; Poland
Issue Date: 2020
Citation: Minerals, Vol. 10 (2020), Art. No. 470
Abstract: Orange greenockite (CdS) aggregates were found in a small fumarole at a burned coal dump near Bytom, Upper Silesia, Poland and were studied using a variety of techniques in order to determine their chemistry, morphology, and most importantly, the mechanism of crystal growth. Greenockite rods, wires, and whiskers with bismuth drops on crystal tops are predominant in these aggregates. Greenockite rods oriented sub-perpendicular to the substrate surface. The rod thickness reaches 5–6 m and about 10 m in length. The catalyst bismuth drop has a diameter comparable to the rod thickness. Fiber forms (wires and whiskers) are sub-parallel to the substrate surface. The thickness of these forms is usually less than 2 m, and the length can be close to 1 mm. The bismuth drop diameter can show a large excess over the fiber thickness. Catalyst drops on the tops of whiskers began to change their form dynamically and exploded, spraying bismuth under the electron beam e ect. Rods grow along the [01–10] direction, and whiskers and wires (axial forms) along the [0001] direction. Greenockite rod crystals, carrying on top a relatively homogenous bismuth catalyst drop, were formed on the heated substrate according to the VLS (vapor–liquid–solid) mechanism at temperatures not lower than 270 C. Greenockite whiskers and wires grew just above of the substrate surface according to the VQS (vapor–quasiliquid–solid) mechanism at temperatures lower than 200 C. These mechanisms of growth have very rarely been recorded to occur in nature and even less so in burning coal dumps. The cooperative growth e ects of the fiber greenockite crystals were also described.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12128/14626
DOI: 10.3390/min10050470
ISSN: 2075-163X
Appears in Collections:Artykuły (WNP)

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