1. Introduction
Orthite (allanite) is a mineral of the epidote group or complex silicates of calcium, aluminum and iron. The common formula is A
2M
2Si
3O
12[OH], where A is a cation of Ca
2+ or Sr
2+ and rare-earth elements (REEs); M is Al
3+, Fe
3+, Mn
3+, Fe
2+, Mg
2+ or other [
1]. Another formula of orthite or hydrosilicate of REEs can be (La, Ca)
2(Al, Fe)
3Si
3O
12(O, OH) [
2].
Orthite in ores can also represent both disseminated crystals and veins of various widths, ranging from several millimeters to some meters. An orthite grain is black, having a submetallic luster, uneven surface and average roundness [
3]. The maximum content of rare-earth elements (REEs) in allanite, as a rule, is 5% of rare-earth oxides; however, for some sources, it can vary from 3 to 51%. The content of thorium is also different: ranging from traces to up to 3% [
4]. Uranium often is not detected as an inclusion.
The reason for the radioactivity of REE minerals, in particular allanite, is the similarity of Th, U and REE behavior in endogenous processes [
5]. The similar structure of the outer electron shells of U, Th, and REE is responsible for the common patterns of their behavior in natural processes and their lithophilicity. The proximity of the ionic radius of these elements causes their isomorphism in minerals. Thorium is closest to cerium, samarium, neodymium and gadolinium, with which it is associated in high-temperature deposits. Joint occurrence of thorium, uranium and rare-earth elements in endogenous processes is also predetermined by the fact that they have a common analogue among petrogenic elements, such as calcium, whereas calcium minerals are the main carriers of these elements. The incorporation of uranium and thorium in calcium minerals depends largely on the presence of rare-earth elements in them. As is known, all high-temperature rare-earth accessory minerals of pegmatites (monazite, orthite, titanium-tantal-niobates) are constantly enriched in thorium and uranium. As the temperature decreases in the postmagmatic stage, thorium, uranium and rare-earth elements are separated due to changes in the acid-alkali characteristic of the process.
The concentration of rare-earth elements exceeds the corresponding clarks 50–80 times in uranium-bearing pegmatites. Pegmatites are characterized by the division of rare-earth elements into two separate groups: cerium and yttrium. In this case, uranium is usually associated with the elements of the yttrium group, and torpy is related to the elements of the cerium group. A small portion of uranium and thorium falls to the share of rock-forming minerals. Uranium concentrations are usually estimated at thousands, more rarely at hundreds, and in some cases at tenths of a percent per mass of the pegmatite vein.
The regularities of allanite radioactivity are also described in [
6]. For example, more altered portions of allanite are noted to be less radioactive than the unaltered ones. This indicates a higher migration ability of uranium and thorium than that of REE, including leaching the radioactive elements during alteration.
The high-level radioactivity of allanite of the Kavala pluton is stated in [
7]. Thorite, monazite and magnetite were identified as inclusions in allanite. Allanite is also noted to be present in the magnetic and non-magnetic fractions, which the authors attribute to the formation of magnetite-allanite aggregates. The International Mineralogical Association distinguishes between three types of minerals depending on dominating REEs: allanite-(Ce), allanite-(La) and orthite-(Y). Besides orthite, the ores contain minerals of belovite-briolite, fluorite, uranothorianite, albite and amphibole. In addition, there are other minerals with REEs, such as xenotime, euxenite or priorite [
8].
A small content of REEs, their scattered presence in ores and a large amount of thorium impede the industrial processing of orthite. Nevertheless, allanite can be considered as a useful promising resource for REE production, because it is widely available and can be processed according to the technologies used for monazite with small improvements [
9,
10]. However, it is possible to obtain significant amounts of orthite from the extraction of other minerals.
Currently, there are several deposits that potentially can be the sites of the allanite extraction: the uranium tailings storage facility in Queensland (Australia), the surveyed area Alice Springs in Australia’s Northern Territory (1 mln tons of ore, 4% of orthite, 20% of rare-earth oxides) and deposits in the Hall Mountain Group in Idaho, USA [
2].
In Russia, there are also orthite deposits. Orthite grains are often found in small amounts when investigating the mineral composition of different deposits [
3,
11,
12,
13]. Orthite is noted to belong to a strongly electromagnetic subfraction. It is also highly radioactive. The mineral contains up to 5.60% of ThO
2 (thororthite) and up to 0.1% of U
3O
8. Orthite, being a species of talcose and rare-earth pegmatites of high-temperature origin (found in Middle Asia, Norway, Sweden, North Carolina, PRC and other regions), is enriched with heavy lanthanides (Sm, Gd), yttrium, thorium and uranium (
Table 1) [
14].
The content of radioactive elements in orthite is poorly studied. The data on the forms of uranium and thorium in orthites are also scarce. Radioactive elements are supposed to be present in orthite not only as an isomorphic impurity, but also as independent minerals, which provides prerequisites for enrichment of orthite by physical methods and separation of a considerable part of radioactive impurities. The processing of allanite may allow considerably expanding the raw material base of REEs. This makes the study of the content and forms of the radioactive elements in orthite (allanite) topical.
2. Materials and Methods
The work studies the specimens of orthite (allanite) ores obtained in the Vernadsky mine (Slyudyanka River, Irkutsk region) and the Yuzhno-Bogatyrskoye occurrence (Kuznetsk Alatau).
The elemental chemical composition of the ore was determined by electronic microscopy of the specimen’s surface using the Hitachi S-3400N (Hitachi Ltd., Tokyo, Japan) microscope equipped with the Bruker (MA, USA) attachment for energy-dispersive analysis that allows determining the content of chemical elements obtained from Li to U starting with 0.1%–0.5%. It also allows studying their spatial distribution in the matrix under investigation. The analyses (TEM studies, SEM research, EBSD analysis and microstructure investigations) were carried out using the equipment of the Tomsk Regional Core Shared Research Facilities Center of National Research Tomsk State University.
The instrumental neutron activation analysis (INAA) was performed in the certified (certificate #ROSS RU.0001.511901) nuclear-geochemical laboratory of Tomsk Polytechnic University (Tomsk, Russia) at the research nuclear reactor facility “IRT-T” using certified methods (NSAM VIMS #410-YaF).
3. Results
3.1. Forms of Uranium and Thorium in Orthite Obtained from the Vernadsky Mine (Slyudyanka River)
The appearance of orthite obtained from the Vernadsky mine is shown in
Figure 1. The length of the ore pieces is 5–6 cm.
The analysis of the defectless part of the crystal of the obtained materials (
Figure 2 and
Figure 3,
Table 2) shows that the concentrations of La and Ce are close, i.e., 6.59% and 7.01%, respectively, which is not typical. The content of Th is 2.61%, while that of U is below the detection threshold (0.1%).
The composition of the main orthite matrix is nearly uniform along the entire surface of the mineral. This fact is related to main matrix elements (Al, Si, Ca, Fe), REEs (Ce, La, Nd) and Th. Sometimes, Ti occurs on the periphery of the mineral (up to 0.6%). The distribution of the elements is very uniform, which allows introducing the isomorphic inclusion of thorium into the crystalline structure of the mineral.
Oftentimes, along the basal planes and in cracks, there are finely dispersed mineral phases of separate thorium (
Figure 4 and
Figure 5,
Table 3) and uranium-thorium minerals (
Figure 6 and
Figure 7,
Table 4) without REEs in them. These phases include radiogenic lead (up to 2.9%).
3.2. Radioactive Elements and Their Forms in the Ore of the Yuzhno-Bogatyrskoye Occurrence (Kuznetsk Alatau)
Orthite is the most widely spread mineral in the specimens under study: its content is 90%–96%. According to the polished sections, orthite can be classified into two groups. The orthite of the first generation is represented by isometric or elongated crystals with a length-to-width ratio of 2:1 and 3:1. The crystals with the prismatic habitus in the cross-section resemble hexagonal prisms. The color is nonuniform; the internal parts of the grains and crystals feature pleochroism in darker shades; the external parts have lighter green-brownish shades. Presumably, the central parts have preserved the patterns of the previously replaced mineral, while the boundary ones are orthite new separate formations.
After the second stage of metasomatosis, orthite changes. The polished sections evidently differ from the first-generation orthite by the light-brownish color along with pleochroism present in brownish shades. This generation occurs together with fluorite and other minerals of this association.
The sand fraction of the specimen includes black, brownish-black, brownish and violet-black orthite. The latter is colored by the microinclusions of fluorite. Evidently, black and brownish-black orthite, whose content reaches 64.5% of the entire sand fraction mass, is nonuniform and is related to orthite of both first and second generations. Brownish orthite, whose content amounts to 27%, belongs to the first generation. The main accumulation of brownish orthite occurs in the fraction class of –0.5 + 0.25 mm (10.76%); the maximum concentration of black orthite is in the fraction class of –2.0 + 0.5 mm (30.77%).
INAA was used to analyze orthites of different colors. The analysis results are presented in
Table 5, which demonstrates that the maximum concentration of REEs and thorium (up to 0.21%) is associated with the darkest varieties of orthite; however, the maximum concentration of heavy lanthanides is noted in brownish orthites. The content of uranium is determined only in brownish-black varieties, where it amounts to 166 g/t.
Electron microscopy fairly well confirms the polymineral character of the specimen, which is a fine mixture of orthite and rock-forming minerals (feldspars, amphiboles, quartz, fluorite and others). There are several types of orthite: thorium-less yttrium-containing orthite with REEs (
Figure 8 and
Figure 9,
Table 6) and yttrium-thorium-containing REE-less orthite with the thorium content of up to 6% (
Figure 10 and
Figure 11,
Table 7).
In this way, one can conclude that the main mass of orthite of the studied ores does not contain an appreciable amount of thorium (the detection threshold of 0.2% is below). The same can be claimed about uranium. The major amount of thorium in these ores is contained as a separate phase. It can be present in a close concretion with orthite (
Figure 12,
Table 8) or it often forms clearly distinguished microstreaks in orthite (
Figure 13 and
Figure 14,
Table 9). Electronic microscopy has not detected uranium mineral phases in ores, including orthite; however, their presence can be testified by fission radiography (
Figure 15).
For this reason, the orthite ores of the Yuzhno-Bogatyrskoe occurrence can theoretically be subjected to gravity concentration processes (for example, jigging, concentration on centrifugal concentrators, etc.) due to the higher density of thorium and uranium minerals (from 4.5 g/cm
3 and higher) compared to allanite (up to 4.2 g/cm
3 and often below this value). Flotation and magnetic separation [
7] are also available for this ore. Thorium and uranium present in orthite in the form of an isomorphic impurity can be removed only by chemical or extraction methods.
4. Discussion
This study shows that the radioactive elements in orthite obtained from the Vernadsky mine are thorium and, evidently, uranium, being mainly an isomorphic inclusion in the orthite crystal lattice. A part of thorium and uranium is contained in the form of separate minerals: thorianite and uranothorianite.
Uranium and thorium in the orthite ores of the Yuzhno-Bogatyrskoye occurrence are mainly represented by their separate minerals, while the content of the orthite phase in the form of their isomorphic inclusion is small.
The Vernadsky Mine orthite can be assumed to be the first-generation orthite, which explains its thorium content as an isomorphic impurity. On the contrary, the Yuzhno-Bogatyrskoye occurrence is partially altered. The separation of radioactive elements from the orthite and their formation of independent minerals can be explained by the process of metasomatosis, in particular, greisenization.
The obtained results are consistent with the literature data. For example, Wood S.A. and Ricketts A. studied allanite-(Ce) in the Eocene Casto granite of Idaho [
15]. Allanite with signs of alteration was surrounded by grains of thorianite, and the most altered allanite was replaced by bastensite and thorianite.
The obtained results allow assuming that the major part of the radioactive inclusions in the Ortite ores of the Yuzhno-Bogatyrskoye occurrence can be removed during ore beneficiation.