E.A.C. Curvo
State University of Campinas
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Featured researches published by E.A.C. Curvo.
American Mineralogist | 2006
C.A. Tello; Rosane Palissari; J.C. Hadler; P.J. Iunes; S. Guedes; E.A.C. Curvo; S. R. Paulo
Abstract To improve kinetic models for apatite fission-track annealing, we present new experimental annealing data that complement previously published data. To determine the degree of annealing of induced tracks, surface density (ρ), and mean horizontal-confined track lengths (l), were measured, both for basal and randomly oriented faces. Our annealing data were obtained by submitting an apatite sample collected in Itambé, Bahia, Brazil, to 46 different isothermal treatments where temperature ranged from 150 to 600 °C (duration of 1, 10, 100, and 1000 h). To compare the behavior of Itambé to Durango apatite, the latter was also annealed for 1 h in 9 isothermal experiments at temperatures between 240 and 380 °C. Our results show that the l/l0 values in Durango are systematically smaller than those in Itambé sample, both in basal and random faces. The curves depicting relative track density reduction, ρ/ρ0, and relative mean confined track length reduction, l/l0, as a function of time and temperature, are similar for ρ/ρ0 > ~0.5, but different for ρ/ρ0 < ~0.5. In this interval, ρ/ρ0 can be measured but the measurement of l/l0 is very difficult because the confined tracks become undetectable. Measurements of ρ/ρ0 and l/l0 for tracks revealed in basal surfaces are systematically lower (but this difference is <3%) than those in randomly oriented ones.
Radiation Measurements | 2001
J.C. Hadler; S. R. Paulo; P.J. Iunes; Maria Laura Balestrieri; Giulio Bigazzi; E.A.C. Curvo; P Hackspacher
Abstract In this work a software developed in the Instituto de Fisica Gleb Wataghin, IFGW, UNICAMP, Campinas, SP, Brazil for obtaining thermal histories using apatite fission track analysis is presented. This software works in Microsoft-Windows environment. It will be freely disposable in the web site of the Departamento de Raios Cosmicos, IFGW, UNICAMP. Thermal histories obtained through this software are compared with those deduced using Monte Trax the software compatible with Apple Macintosh developed by Gallagher.
Applied Spectroscopy | 2012
Carlos Alberto Tello Sáenz; E.A.C. Curvo; Airton Natanael Coelho Dias; Cleber José Soares; Carlos J. L. Constantino; Igor Alencar; S. Guedes; Rosane Palissari; Julio Cesar Hadler Neto
Studies of zircon grains using optical microscopy, micro-Raman spectroscopy, and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) have been carried out to characterize the surface of natural zircon as a function of etching time. According to the surface characteristics observed using an optical microscope after etching, the zircon grains were classified as: (i) homogeneous; (ii) anomalous, and (iii) hybrid. Micro-Raman results showed that, as etching time increases, the crystal lattice is slightly altered for homogeneous grains, it is completely damaged for anomalous grains, and it is altered in some areas for hybrid grains. The SEM (energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, EDS) results indicated that, independent of the grain types, where the crystallinity remains after etching, the chemical composition of zircon is approximately 33% SiO2:65% ZrO2 (standard natural zircon), and for areas where the grain does not have a crystalline structure, there are variations of ZrO2 and, mainly, SiO2. In addition, it is possible to observe a uniform surface density of fission tracks in grain areas where the determined crystal lattice and chemical composition are those of zircon. Regarding hybrid grains, we discuss whether the areas slightly altered by the chemical etching can be analyzed by the fission track method (FTM) or not. Results of zircon fission track and U-Pb dating show that hybrid and homogeneous grains can be used for dating, and not only homogeneous grains. More than 50 sedimentary samples from the Bauru Basin (southeast Brazil) were analyzed and show that only a small amount of grains are homogeneous (10%), questioning the validity of the rest of the grains for thermo-chronological evolution studies using zircon FTM dating.
Applied Spectroscopy | 2014
Rosana Silveira Resende; Carlos Alberto Tello Sáenz; E.A.C. Curvo; Carlos J. L. Constantino; R. Aroca; Wagner Massayuki Nakasuga
Spectroscopic and morphological studies, designed to improve our understanding of the physicochemical phenomena that occur during zircon crystallization, are presented. The zircon fission track method (ZFTM) is used routinely in various laboratories around the world; however, there are some methodological difficulties needing attention. Depending on the surface fission track density observed under an optical microscope, the zircon grain surfaces are classified as homogeneous, heterogeneous, hybrid, or anomalous. In this study, zircon grain surfaces are characterized using complementary techniques such as optical microscopy (OM), micro-Raman spectroscopy, and scanning electron microscopy (SEM), both before and after chemical etching. Our results suggest that anomalous grains have subfamilies and that etching anisotropy related to heterogeneous grains is due to different crystallographic faces within the same polished surface that cannot be observed under an optical microscope. The improved methodology was used to determine the zircon fission track ages of samples collected from the Bauru Group located in the north of Paraná Basin, Brazil. A total of 514 zircon grains were analyzed, consisting of 10% homogeneous, about 10% heterogeneous, about 20% hybrid, and 60% anomalous grains. These results show that the age distributions obtained for homogeneous, heterogeneous, and hybrid grains are both statistically and geologically compatible.
Radiation Measurements | 2009
J.C. Hadler; P.J. Iunes; C.A. Tello; Farid Chemale; K. Kawashita; E.A.C. Curvo; F.G.S. Santos; T.E. Gasparini; P.A.F.P. Moreira; S. Guedes
Radiation Measurements | 2005
P.J. Iunes; Giulio Bigazzi; J.C. Hadler Neto; Marinella A. Laurenzi; Maria Laura Balestrieri; Pio Norelli; A.M. Osorio Araya; S. Guedes; S.R. Paulo; P.A.F.P. Moreira; Rosane Palissari; E.A.C. Curvo
Radiation Measurements | 2005
E.A.C. Curvo; J.C. Hadler Neto; P.J. Iunes; S. Guedes; S.R. Paulo; Peter Christian Hackspacher; Rosane Palissari; P.A.F.P. Moreira
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section B-beam Interactions With Materials and Atoms | 2007
Sandro Guedes; E.A.C. Curvo; C. A. S. Tello; J.C. Hadler; P.J. Iunes; S. R. Paulo; Rosane Palissari
Radiation Measurements | 2005
S. Guedes; P.J. Iunes; J.C. Hadler Neto; Giulio Bigazzi; I. Alencar; Rosane Palissari; E.A.C. Curvo; P.A.F.P. Moreira
Radiation Measurements | 2007
E.A.C. Curvo; P.J. Iunes; S. Guedes; Rosane Palissari; J.C. Hadler