Handheld LIBS for Li Exploration: An Example from the Carolina Tin-Spodumene Belt, USA

Authors: Michael A. Wise 1, Russell S. Harmon 2,* , Adam Curry 2 , Morgan Jennings 3, Zach Grimac 4
and Daria Khashchevskaya 2
Keywords: laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy
LIBS
Li analysis
LCT pegmatites
K/Rb-Li systematics
Issue Date: 9 January 2022
Publisher: MDPI
Series/Report no.: Minerals 2022, 12, 77.
Abstract: Laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS), which has recently emerged as tool for
geochemical analysis outside the traditional laboratory setting, is an ideal tool for Li exploration
because it is the only technique that can measure Li in minerals, rocks, soils, and brines in-situ in the
field. In addition to being used in many products essential tomodern life, Li is a necessary element for a reduced carbon future and Li–Cs–Ta (LCT) granitic pegmatites are an important source of Li. Such
pegmatites can have varying degrees of enrichment in Li, Rb, Cs, Be, Sn, Ga, Ta>Nb, B, P, and F.We
focus here on the LCT pegmatites of the Carolina Tin-Spodumene Belt (CTSB) situated in the Kings
Mountain Shear Zone, which extends from South Carolina into North Carolina. The CTSB hosts both
barren and fertile pegmatites, with Li-enriched pegmatites containing spodumene, K-feldspar, albite,
quartz, muscovite, and beryl. We illustrate how handheld LIBS analysis can be used for real-time Li
analysis in the field at a historically important CTSB pegmatite locality in Gaston County, N.C. in four
contexts: (i) elemental detection and identification; (ii) microchemical mapping; (iii) depth profiling;
and (iv) elemental quantitative analysis. Finally, as an example of a practical exploration application,
we describe how handheld LIBS can be used to measure K/Rb ratios and Li contents of muscovite
and rapidly determine the degree of pegmatite fractionation. This study demonstrates the potential
of handheld LIBS to drastically reduce the time necessary to acquire geochemical data relevant to
acquiring compositional information for pegmatites during a Li pegmatite exploration program.

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