4.2. Ontogenetic Features of Macroparticles of Gold Separated during the Gravitational Enrichment of Crushed Coal Samples from the Yerkovetsky Brown Coal Deposit
Methods of mineralogical analyses were used to separate accessory minerals from the fraction of averaged samples of coal from the upper and lower layers and a mineralized interlayer, which settled on the bottom during separation in the organic liquid. The mineralized interlayer is a thin carbonaceous clay layer separating the upper and lower coal layers. The coals of the upper layer were found to contain (in descending order of frequency of occurrence) the following: ilmenite, zircon, garnet, corundum, rutile, pyrite, arsenopyrite, amphibole, apatite, cassiterite, epidote, magnetite, chromite, sphene, tourmaline, monazite, spinel, galena, anatase, staurolite, sillimanite, distene, hydroxides and oxides of iron, and native gold (22 particles). The set of accessory minerals in the samples of interlayer and lower-layer coals is similar, but magnetite, hematite, and ilmenite dominate. The organomineral substance of the interlayer macroparticles contains native gold (9 particles), but in the coals of the lower layer, no macroparticles of native gold were found.
Macroparticles of gold (>10 μm) from the coals of the upper layer and mineralized interlayer did not significantly differ from each other morphologically and did not have any distinct features. The native gold of golden-yellow color has a thin, uneven coating of nonmetallic phases, not rounded, with a rough surface, predominantly lamellar-like in shape. Lumpy, rod, elongated flat, and flake shapes are present.
Native gold is presented mainly by Au-Ag and Au-Ag-Hg varieties (
Figure 2,
Figure 3,
Figure 4 and
Figure 5), frequently with Cu impurities. The gold fineness in coal varies in the range from 594 to 999‰ (
Figure 2 and
Figure 3). Among Au-Ag phases, which is the same as in native gold from overcoal sediments, high-fineness varieties are predominant (more than 900‰), but their content in the coal is somewhat lower and accounts for 46.9%. The distribution between high-fineness intervals shifts to the region of predominance of phases with a fineness of 900‰–950‰ (
Figure 2). Phases with medium (800‰–899‰) and relatively low (less than 799‰) fineness do not demonstrate significant fluctuations in the frequency of occurrence.
Some subgrains in aggregated individuals of native gold have considerable differences in their concentrations of Au and Ag, and there are also subgrains with zonal heterogeneity and varying composition of Au and Ag (
Figure 4), which occurs at different scale levels in the structural organization of grains. Particles of native gold, both individual (monograins) and subindividual, which is a constituent element of the aggregate, have coatings of varying thickness and the density of a ferruginous–siliceous composition (
Figure 4).
Particles of mercurian high-fineness gold (to 5 wt.% Hg) are predominantly voluminous, with a relatively smooth surface (
Figure 5) and a spongy fine porous structure at a submicron level (
Figure 6a). Some individual particles with a significantly higher mercury content (Hg~25 and 12 wt.%) are aggregates of a thin platelet and globular structure with a low degree of intergrowth and compaction (
Figure 5).
Individuals with high-fineness, with and without Hg, have a corpuscular sponge-like structure (
Figure 6a,b). The morphostructural features of grain subindividuals can clearly be observed. There are individuals that have a globular structure with different degrees of merging grains, which gradually lose their individuality, forming lumpy, structurally unexpressed surfaces (
Figure 6c). They form lumpy subgrains (
Figure 6d) with the elements of contact intergrowth with each other, the mechanisms of which are described in [
17]. The lumpy aggregates of native gold are polyphase. They are corpuscular sponge aggregates with relatively dense structures, unevenly covered with quasi-amorphous Au-Ag phases (
Figure 6d). These grains are at the stage of the compaction and formation of the surface layer (encapsulation), which gradually hides the internal substructure of the organization of native gold grains (
Figure 6e). The corpuscular spongy structure of native gold grains suggests that a rather large specific surface develops in the pores while excessive surface energy leads to the effects of their solid-phase transformation, respectively [
17,
18].
With the increase of silver content in native gold, a characteristic substructural element of which is fibrils (filiform substructural element), at the submicron level, filiform-elongated, tabular elements begin to appear in native gold (
Figure 7). There are gold grains whose microsculpture at some surfaces reflects the imprinted pattern of the contact surface of OS (
Figure 8). This may suggest the authigenic formation of these gold grains that were deposited on the organic substance. This is especially related to the thin tabular individuals, which occur in the fractures of some coals.
Thus, macroparticles of native gold extracted using isolated gravitational enrichment methods from crushed samples of the Yerkovetsky brown coal deposit have significant similarities in morphostructural organization and chemical composition with the native gold of overcoal deposits. Native gold grains of high fineness are represented by the aggregates of submicron particles of a globular-sponge structure, which are at identical stages of compaction and encapsulation with the formation of a surface layer, with gradual merging and smoothing of the boundaries of substructural components. Medium- and low-fineness varieties of native gold have a denser structural organization owing to the fibrillar-tabular structure of substructural elements inherited from silver.
4.3. Ontogenetic Features of Microparticles of Native Gold That during Gravitational Enrichment Remain in Light Organic Fractions
Electron-microscopic and X-ray spectral studies of the surface of coal-polished sections and dispersed coal particles show that the micromineral form of gold redistributed in OS and remaining in light organic fractions during the gravitational enrichment of Yerkovetsky brown coal deposits is a rather common phenomenon (
Figure 9,
Figure 10 and
Figure 11).
Among the particles of native gold remaining in light organic forms, we identified coarse-dispersed (>1 μm) (
Figure 9), medium-dispersed (0.1–10 μm) (
Figure 9,
Figure 10 and
Figure 11), and ultradispersed (<0.1 μm) (
Figure 11) particles. Native gold, 1–10 µm in size, associated with both OS and IOS coals, has mainly irregular platy and lumpy shapes with irregular jagged and smoothed edges of the spongy microrelief surface and are most commonly aggregates of submicron tabular individuals of the above-described structure (
Figure 9 and
Figure 10). High-fineness gold prevailed, while medium- and low-fineness gold was scarce (
Figure 3). High-fineness gold occasionally exhibits zonal heterogeneity in silver content, resulting from the difference in the chemical composition of some intergrown platelets. Individual grains are either monoplatelets or intergrowths of submicronic plates with a varying degree of intergrowth and the smoothing of the surface, most of which have irregular edges with numerous outgrowths and pits (
Figure 9 and
Figure 10). The borders with associated mineral phases are ragged and penetrating, and relatively discernible boundaries are formed only with well-crystallized minerals (quartz, feldspar, zircon).
Gold nanoparticles (<0.05 μm) are deposited on the walls of structural niches of coals (
Figure 11) that are partially filled with kaolinite oolites. Tabular submicron particles of irregular shape are localized directly on oolites and in interoolite space (
Figure 11a). Gold nanoparticles are often found in silicified and alumosilicified phases of variable composition (containing various amounts of Fe, Mn, Ti, Ca, Mg, K, Na, S, and rarely Cl) with a flocculent, flaky structure (
Figure 11b), occasionally with compaction and recrystallization zones and chemical compositional stratification in ferruginous oxy-hydroxide phases (seldom with an admixture of S and Cl). Oxide and hydroxide iron phases of the flocculent loose structure often contain numerous gold nanoparticles unevenly distributed throughout the volume of the host matrix (
Figure 11c). Gold nanoparticles are deposited on the surface of quartz, zircon, native copper (with admixture of Ni and Fe), and barite (
Figure 11d). Gold is deposited on the surface of IOS, encapsulated by flake-like ultradispersed matter and released in film phases in the form of ~20 nm spherical particles and on the surface of films in the form of bulk and plate-like individuals (
Figure 11e) and is present in the relatively dense structureless mass of OS coals (
Figure 11f).
Submicron gold particles are of a fineness close to 1000‰, and the silver content is often below the detection limit of X-ray microanalysis. The peculiarities of the interaction of submicron gold particles with other mineral phases and OS suggest the following two mechanisms of their formation: the precipitation of dissolved forms on adsorbents of different compositions and the colloidal flocculation of the polycomponent substrate with the formation of polyphasic particles.
Gold particles are found in all selected coal samples, but their distribution in the samples along the coal seam is uneven. The coal samples above the interlayer are composed mainly of fusinite-helitites, which preserve a well-defined wooden structure represented mainly by conductive and mechanical fibers and frequently corky bark tissue; resin bodies and cuticles are also present (
Figure 12a,b). The tissues of carbonized wood are mineralized to varying degrees (
Figure 12a–d). Structured elements are cemented by the main gelified structureless heterogeneous mass composed of flakes, fibers, and fragments of fusenized tissues, sometimes with traces of cellular structure. The interlayer material has organomineral formations of stable carbonized plant residues with the main mass of structureless silicified and alumino-silicified coals (
Figure 12e,f). The coals under the interlayer are composed of gelified structureless fibrous masses containing structured fragments corresponding to parinchyma leaf and stem tissues, and fragments with the structure of conducting tissues are rarely observed (
Figure 12g). The most stable parts of higher plants are also present here as follows: spores, spore sheaths, cuticles, cork, and sclerenchyma tissues.
The main type of mineralization in the coal seam roof is determined by the infiltration processes of the migration of chemical elements with surface water penetrating from overcoal sediments into coal by the developed percolation system resulting from the preservation of the structure of carbonized wood and the fracture and interstructural elements of coal. The main mineralizing agent in the seam roof is silica hydrogels. Silica is deposited when infiltrating alkaline and neutral surface ground waters are replaced by acidic waters circulating in the coal seam. This results in the silicification of coal (
Figure 13a). The evaporation or freezing of solutions containing silica causes precipitation in the form of powder, crusts, or gels. Silica hydrogels in the acidic medium of coal are consumed in the reactions of the resilication of hydroxides of aluminum and iron, favoring the processes of the hydrogene formation of clays and other mineral phases (
Figure 12 and
Figure 13).
Aluminosilicates are the first to precipitate out of solutions to generate hydrogenic kaolinite in the form of micron oolites with a floccular structure, which fill natural structural niches of coal, forming a diffuse type of mineralization with a gradual decrease in the number of oolites below the section (
Figure 12a and
Figure 13b,c). Together with kaolinite oolites, the natural structural niches of coal contain the following micromineral accumulations: native gold (
Figure 11 and
Figure 12), solid solutions Zn-Cu and Pb-Sn-Cu, sulfosalts of Ag-Sb and Cu-Sn, sulfides of Fe, Pb, Zn, Sb, and Hg, oxides of Zn, Sn, Ti, Fe (occasionally in the form of ~5 μm spheres), and Fe(Mn), ironmagnesian and magnesian chromospinels with Ni admixture.
After the main reaction of aluminum hydroxide resilication and the increase in the acidity below the section (below the level of ~0.5 m from the seam roof), oxy-hydroxide and oxy-silicified iron mineral phases begin to precipitate from the hydrogels (
Figure 13c). In the samples picked within the range of 1 m from the seam roof, 10 microparticles of gold (0.66 × 1.57–4.1 × 8.3 μm) and 12 submicron (less than 0.1, ~0.12–0.5, 0.3 × 0.6 μm) particles were found. Particles in the form of individual platelets with irregular edges and their aggregates were immersed in a structureless silicified mass with the stratification of compositions and separation of ferruginous, magnesian-ferruginous, and aluminosilicate phases in Fe(Mn) oxides and OS coals. Aggregated particles contain enrichment zones of Ag and occasionally Hg.
The frequency of occurrence of zones of ferruginous mineralization gradually increases and reaches a maximum in the middle part of the seam at the level of ~2/3 from the top layer from the roof of the coal seam, then gradually decreases to the separating interlayer of clayey coals. With the increase in the zones of ferruginous mineralization, the frequency of occurrence of native gold microparticles also increases. In the zone of the maximum saturation of oxy-hydroxide ferruginous mineralization, the largest number of gold particles was found, with 20 microns and 45 submicrons among them. Gold microparticles, the size of which varies within 1–5 μm, are represented by plate-like monoparticles or intergrowths of two particles. The larger particles are aggregates of tabular micron and submicron particles of various degrees of intergrowth and compaction. Four of them are more than 10 μm in size (6.8 × 10.5, 9.7 × 10.2, 16.1 × 29.1, 14.2 × 17.8 μm) and refer to macromineral forms (
Figure 9). Submicron gold particles are associated with aluminosilicates, silica, Fe(Mn) oxides and hydroxides, and barite. Together with gold particles, there are microphases of sulfides of Ag and Au, Fe, Pb (with Ag impurities), Zn (with Fe and Sb impurities), oxides of Zn, Ti, Fe(Mn), magnesian chromospinels, as well as fluorapatite, scheelite and zircon. Gold sulfide (Au
2S) was found in association with iron oxysilicide and in the organic matrix.
The coals of the upper and lower layers bordering the mineralized clayey coal interlayer (↑↓ ~0.5 m) are characterized by a significant number of local zones of calcium sulfate mineralization (
Figure 13d). This was due to the higher degree of metamorphism of coal in the contact zones. OS, under the influence of pressure and increased temperature, underwent compaction and dehydration, and chemical and biochemical transformations led to the loss of functional groups that retained the elements (Ca, Fe, S, O, etc.) associated with it. Phase-forming reactions are activated between the released elements in local zones. The frequency of occurrence of sulfate mineralization zones decreases with the distance from the contact zone. The zones of oxy-hydroxide ferruginous mineralization with areas of ferruginous sulfatization are also present (
Figure 13c). However, despite the similarities in the basic type of mineralization of the coal from the contact zone of the upper and lower coal layers, resulting from the internal resource of the coals, there are some individual differences for the disseminated mineralization above and below the interlayer.
The mineral set of microphases of the bordering coal layer upward from the clayey coal interlayer is determined by its interaction with overlying coals. Above this section, with a decrease in calcium sulfatization zones, the number of zones with oxy-hydroxide ferruginous mineralization increases. The microparticles of magnetite (with Mn admixtures), magnesian chromospinels, rutile, zincite, quartz, feldspar, fluorapatite, talc, kaolinite, and ferruginous aluminosilicates of variable composition are present. Sulfides consist mainly of Fe and Pb (often with the admixture of Ag), scarce Zn (with admixture of Fe), and Sb, Cu, Cu-Fe, and As-Fe minerals. Four micron (1.3 × 2.1, 2.1 × 3.1, 2.9 × 4.0, 4.2 × 4.5 μm) and two submicron (0.26 and 0.3 μm) high-fineness gold particles were found. The submicron gold particles are associated with oxy-silicified phases of dense and floccular structure, Fe(Mn) hydroxides with impurities of elements contained in various types of coals (Ca, Mg, S, and Cl), gypsum, and the OS of coals.
In the polished sections collected from the mineralized bordering layer of clayey coal, 16 microparticles of mainly irregular plate-like morphology (0.8 × 1.16–4.6 × 7.6 μm, ~0.2 μm thick, single plate measurement) were found. The relief surface was relatively smoothed, and the edges were irregular and rolled. Several particles were intergrowths of 2–3 plates, one intergrown with copper. High-fineness gold varieties were predominant, but medium-fineness Au-Ag varieties and Au-Ag-Cu solid solutions were also present, with the Hg admixture occurring rarely. Submicron gold particles (14 units) were identified in the Fe(Mn) oxides of the floccular structure, some of which contained impurities of Hg and Cl and ferruginous aluminosilicates of denser structure. Submicron gold particles deposited on feldspar grains were also detected. Microphases of native Ag, Bi, Ni(Fe), Fe sulfides (frequently with Ni impurities), and Pb (with Cu impurities) were found in clayey coal. Among the oxides, hematite, magnetite (with Mn admixtures), titanomagnetite, and ilmenite were predominant; zincite, fluorapatite, scheelite, zircon, feldspar, quartz, and ferruginous aluminosilicates were also present.
The bordering coal of the lower layer inherited the main mineral set of the overlying mineralized clayey coal interlayer. The number of gold particles relative to the clayey coal interlayer was less: 10 microns (0.95 × 1.46–2.8 × 5.8 μm) and 8 submicrons (0.05–0.9 μm). High- and medium-fineness gold varieties and a microparticle of native silver (with S and Cl impurities) were present. One microparticle of gold was intergrown with gypsum. Submicron gold particles were identified in the flake-like mass of Fe(Mn) oxides and ferruginous aluminosilicates of a denser structure. Hematite, magnetite (with Mn impurities), titanomagnetite, and ilmenite dominated among accessory minerals, and zincite, quartz, corundum, fluorapatite, feldspar, ferruginous aluminosilicates were present. Sulfides are represented mainly by Fe (often with Ni impurities) and Pb and rarely by Zn (with Fe impurities) and Sb minerals.
In the coals of the lower layer below the sulfatized zone and up to the bottom of the bed, one could observe scattered, dispersed forms of coal mineralization and rare isolations of ferruginous mineralization encrusting the boundaries of stable elements of plant tissue. The morphostructure of gold microparticles (8 units: elongate 0.8 × 1.3–4.1 × 8.95 μm, rounded 1.1 × 1.3, 4.1 × 5.3 μm) is characterized by a smooth surface and edges, and substructural elements are poorly exhibited. Submicron gold particles (31 units 0.08–0.56 μm) are associated with aluminosilicate phases and ferrous oxides (with Hg and Cl impurities). Only one flat particle (6.26 × 7.3 μm) of high-fineness gold was found in the polished section of the sample selected from the bottom of the formation. The microphases of Cu-Zn and Cu-Sn intermetallides, Fe, Fe-Cu, Fe-As, Pb, Sb sulfides, hematite, magnetite (with Mn impurities), titanomagnetite, and ilmenite dominated among oxides, and rutile, zincite, cassiterite, sphene, magnesian chromospinels, quartz, corundum, talc, feldspars, ferruginous aluminosilicates, and barite (with impurities of Sr and Ca) were identified.
All the particles of native gold found in coals have a mineralized coating, the thickness of which increases with the decreasing particle size. The substance of the coating has a polycomponent composition based on the oxysilicized iron of a variable composition with a wide range of impurity elements (Ti, Mn, Ca, Mg, Al, S) and carbon (
Figure 14).
Occasionally, in the local zones of coal, one can observe the co-occurrence of submicron Au- and Ag-bearing particles as independent mineral phases as follows: native, sulfide minerals, and ultradisperse structureless phases of silver chlorides on the surface of larger gold particles (
Figure 15). Platy and porous native gold is deposited in polymineral hollow structures of coal partings (
Figure 15a). Native silver contains an admixture of Cu, but more often, the energy dispersive spectra obtained from silver phases display additional peaks only from the elements that dominate in the system (C, O, Ca, Fe, Si, Al), the appearance of which is due to the small sizes and platy, porous structure of the particle.
Single particles of sulfides (
Figure 15b), bromides (
Figure 15c), and chlorides of silver (
Figure 15e) were detected. The presence of acanthite among the segregations of native gold may suggest the migration of part of silver in the form of sulfide complexes [
21]. The deposition of submicron particles of gold associated with silver halides is based on the exchange reaction of silver sulfide, which leads to the formation of gold sulfide that decomposes to release metallic gold. In the association under study, haloid elements mainly enter the composition of silver minerals. Cl is included in the compounds together with Ag. It was found both in native gold and its sulfides and sulfates. Br, together with Cl, I, and Ag, were included in the composition of the embolite.
It is worth noting that part of the gold in brown coals can be found in a dissolved state in pore water in the form of sulfur-bearing complexes of the following types, AuSO
3−, Au(SO
3)
23−, Au(S
2O
3)
23−, Au(SO
3)(S
2O
3)
3−, Au(SO
3)Cl
2−, AuHS, Au(HS)
2−, AuS
−, Au(SO
4)
2− etc. [
21,
22,
23,
24,
25], which could have been formed as a result of the dissolution of ultradisperse forms of gold in the acidic sulfur-saturated medium of coals. The confirmation of this form of gold in brown coals is the appearance of gold nanoparticles along the boundaries of cracks formed on the surface of the coal-polished section during this study. In the energy dispersive spectra of these gold nanoparticles, a slightly increased intensity of the S Kα peak relative to the host matrix was observed. The reason for the appearance of cracks on the polished section of coal in a vacuum environment is the shrinkage of the substance due to the loss of the gas–liquid phase localized in the pore space of coal. Waters containing dissolved forms of gold, with the appearance of cracks, are released from the pore space and migrate to the surface of the polished section, and while decomposing, release gold deposited at the crack boundary.
A particle of high-fineness gold with the substructure imitating the plant tissue (pseudomorphoses) was identified (
Figure 16). The formation of this particle is, most likely, related to the processes of saturation of the OS ultraporous structure with ionic Au solutions and their further mineralization. The ionic form of OS infiltration of this particle is more preferable since no gelified coating was observed on this grain.