The composition and radiolysis impact on aromatic hydrocarbons in sedimentary organic matter from the Mulga Rock (Australia) uranium deposit

Our interest in the effect of ionizing radiation on sedimentary organic matter (OM) has extended to the molecular distributions and stable isotopic values of aromatic hydrocarbons. Thermally immature sediments (%Ro = 0.26; Tmax < 421 °C) spanning a 173–5280 ppm radiolytic gradient from the Mu...

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Main Authors: Greenwood, Paul, Shan, C., Holman, A., Grice, Kliti
Format: Journal Article
Published: Pergamon 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/70176
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author Greenwood, Paul
Shan, C.
Holman, A.
Grice, Kliti
author_facet Greenwood, Paul
Shan, C.
Holman, A.
Grice, Kliti
author_sort Greenwood, Paul
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Our interest in the effect of ionizing radiation on sedimentary organic matter (OM) has extended to the molecular distributions and stable isotopic values of aromatic hydrocarbons. Thermally immature sediments (%Ro = 0.26; Tmax < 421 °C) spanning a 173–5280 ppm radiolytic gradient from the Mulga Rock Uranium Deposit (Western Australia) contained high abundances of vascular plant sourced aromatic (and aliphatic) terpenoids. Terpenoids with 2–5 rings and various levels of aromatisation were detected in the aromatic fractions of these sediments. The extent of aromatisation increased with sedimentary U/radiolytic levels, attributed to free-radical promoted reactions including dehydrogenation and oxidation of aliphatic precursors. The sediment with the highest U content (5280 ppm) showed only diterpenoids and low MW PAHs, reflecting complete radiolytic removal of higher MW terpenoids. A larger number and variety of terpenoid products were detected from the other sediments (U = 1700 ppm) from which several radiolytically promoted reaction pathways were identified. Cadinene, for instance, was subject to competing hydrogenation and dehydrogenation reactions which gave cadinane and progressively aromatised diterpenoid analogues, respectively. Pentacyclic terpane precursors were also progressively aromatised and partially converted to des-A-triterpenoid or C-ring cleaved triterpenoid (tetracyclic) products. These reactions are typical of the natural diagenetic transformation of plant terpenoids, with the main effect of the high radiolytic levels an apparent hastening of diagenetic processes. The d13C values of several aromatised products indicated a slight13C enrichment with increasing aromatisation, likely due to preferential abstraction of H from12C.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-701762018-12-14T01:02:22Z The composition and radiolysis impact on aromatic hydrocarbons in sedimentary organic matter from the Mulga Rock (Australia) uranium deposit Greenwood, Paul Shan, C. Holman, A. Grice, Kliti Our interest in the effect of ionizing radiation on sedimentary organic matter (OM) has extended to the molecular distributions and stable isotopic values of aromatic hydrocarbons. Thermally immature sediments (%Ro = 0.26; Tmax < 421 °C) spanning a 173–5280 ppm radiolytic gradient from the Mulga Rock Uranium Deposit (Western Australia) contained high abundances of vascular plant sourced aromatic (and aliphatic) terpenoids. Terpenoids with 2–5 rings and various levels of aromatisation were detected in the aromatic fractions of these sediments. The extent of aromatisation increased with sedimentary U/radiolytic levels, attributed to free-radical promoted reactions including dehydrogenation and oxidation of aliphatic precursors. The sediment with the highest U content (5280 ppm) showed only diterpenoids and low MW PAHs, reflecting complete radiolytic removal of higher MW terpenoids. A larger number and variety of terpenoid products were detected from the other sediments (U = 1700 ppm) from which several radiolytically promoted reaction pathways were identified. Cadinene, for instance, was subject to competing hydrogenation and dehydrogenation reactions which gave cadinane and progressively aromatised diterpenoid analogues, respectively. Pentacyclic terpane precursors were also progressively aromatised and partially converted to des-A-triterpenoid or C-ring cleaved triterpenoid (tetracyclic) products. These reactions are typical of the natural diagenetic transformation of plant terpenoids, with the main effect of the high radiolytic levels an apparent hastening of diagenetic processes. The d13C values of several aromatised products indicated a slight13C enrichment with increasing aromatisation, likely due to preferential abstraction of H from12C. 2018 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/70176 10.1016/j.orggeochem.2018.06.013 Pergamon restricted
spellingShingle Greenwood, Paul
Shan, C.
Holman, A.
Grice, Kliti
The composition and radiolysis impact on aromatic hydrocarbons in sedimentary organic matter from the Mulga Rock (Australia) uranium deposit
title The composition and radiolysis impact on aromatic hydrocarbons in sedimentary organic matter from the Mulga Rock (Australia) uranium deposit
title_full The composition and radiolysis impact on aromatic hydrocarbons in sedimentary organic matter from the Mulga Rock (Australia) uranium deposit
title_fullStr The composition and radiolysis impact on aromatic hydrocarbons in sedimentary organic matter from the Mulga Rock (Australia) uranium deposit
title_full_unstemmed The composition and radiolysis impact on aromatic hydrocarbons in sedimentary organic matter from the Mulga Rock (Australia) uranium deposit
title_short The composition and radiolysis impact on aromatic hydrocarbons in sedimentary organic matter from the Mulga Rock (Australia) uranium deposit
title_sort composition and radiolysis impact on aromatic hydrocarbons in sedimentary organic matter from the mulga rock (australia) uranium deposit
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/70176