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Towards the differentiation of non-treated and treated corundum minerals by ion-beam-induced luminescence and other complementary techniques
Authors:H Calvo del Castillo  N Deprez  T Dupuis  F Mathis  A Deneckere  P Vandenabeele  T Calderón  D Strivay
Institution:1. Centre Européen d’Archéométrie—I.P.N.A.S., University of Liege, Allée du 6 Ao?t, 17, BAT. 15, Sart Tilman, 4000, Liege, Belgium
2. Vakgroep Analytische Chemie, University of Ghent, Proeftuinstraat 86, 9000, Ghent, Belgium
3. Department of Archaeology and Ancient History of Europe, University of Ghent, Blandijnberg 2, 9000, Ghent, Belgium
4. Department of Geology and Geochemistry, Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Ctra. Colmenar km 15, Cantoblanco, 28049, Madrid, Spain
Abstract:Differentiation of treated and non-treated gemstones is a chief concern for major jewellery import companies. Low-quality corundum specimens coming from Asia appear to be often treated with heat, BeO or flux in order to enhance their properties as precious minerals. A set of corundum samples, rubies and sapphires from different origins, both treated and non-treated has been analysed at the Centre Européen d’Archéométrie, with ion-beam-induced luminescence (IBIL) and other complementary techniques such as Raman, proton-induced X-ray emission (PIXE), and proton-induced gamma-ray emission (PIGE). IBIL, also known as ionoluminescence, has been used before to detect impurities or defects inside synthetic materials and natural minerals; its use for the discrimination of gemstone simulants or synthetic analogues has been elsewhere discussed (Cavenago-Bignami Moneta, Gemología, Tomo I Piedras preciosas, perlas, corales, marfil. Ediciones Omega, Barcelona, 1991). PIXE has been frequently applied in the archaeometric field for material characterisation and provenance studies of minerals (Hughes, Ruby & sapphire. RWH Publishing, Fallbrook, 1997; Calvo del Castillo et al., Anal Bioanal Chem 387:869–878, 2007; Calligaro et al., NIM-B 189:320–327, 2002) and PIGE complements the elemental analysis by detecting light elements in these materials such as—and lighter than—sodium that cannot be identified with the PIXE technique (Sanchez et al., NIM-B 130:682–686, 1997; Emmett et al., Gems Gemology 39:84–135, 2003). The micro-Raman technique has also been used complementarily to ion beam analysis techniques for mineral characterisation (Novak et al., Appl Surf Sci 231–232:917–920, 2004). The aim of this study is to provide new means for systematic analysis of corundum gemstone-quality mineral, alternative to the traditional gemmologic methods; for this purpose, a Spanish jewellery import company supplied us with a number of natural corundum samples coming from different places (part of them treated as explained above). The PIXE elemental concentrations of the samples showed large quantities of calcium and lead in some cases that can be linked to treatment with fluxes or lead oxide. The plot of the chromium and iron concentration grouped the samples in various aggregates that corresponded to the different types of corundum analysed. Micro-Raman complemented the PIXE analysis corroborating the presence of lead oxides but the use of the PIGE technique was not successful for the detection of beryllium due to the low cross section of the nuclear reaction chosen for its identification. IBIL was capable of distinguishing between treated and non-treated samples of the same type based on the luminescent features of the materials. Work presented at the International Symposium on Luminescence Spectrometry 2008, September 7–11, Bologna, Italy
Keywords:Corundum  Ruby  Sapphire  IBIL  PIXE  PIGE  Micro-Raman
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