Patrick,
Some minerals are photoluminescent, fluorescent, or phosphorescent
materials, and silicon dioxide in certain form with proper impurity could be
one of these. Try to heat the sand to 1000 C and cool down to room
temperature to check again.
Jingsong
-----Original Message-----
From: Confocal Microscopy List [mailto:
[hidden email]] On
Behalf Of Patrick Van Oostveldt
Sent: Wednesday, May 27, 2009 9:30 AM
To:
[hidden email]
Subject: fluorescent coating
Dear,
We have a user visualizing sand grains, which are suspected to be
coated with organic material. The grains are suspended in immersion
oil and become nearly transparent.
The surface can be visualize by fluorescence excitation at 488.
The strange thing however is that heating these samples to 450 celcius
only partially destroys the original fluorescence.
Is there a mineralogist with can provide a reasonable explanation for this?
Thanks
Patrick Van Oostveldt
--
Dep. Moleculaire Biotechnologie
Coupure links 653
B 9000 GENT
tel 09 264 5969
fax 09 264 6219