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Dive into the research topics where Richard W. Court is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard W. Court.


Analytica Chimica Acta | 2009

Quantitative flash pyrolysis Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy of organic materials.

Richard W. Court; Mark A. Sephton

Thermal degradation is a common technique used to investigate the nature of organic materials. However, existing methods for the Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) identification and quantification of volatile products from the thermal degradation of organic materials are limited to the technique of thermogravimetric analysis (TGA)-FTIR, which utilizes relatively low heating rates. However, the thermal degradation products of organic materials are known to vary depending on the rate of heating, with lower heating rates of biomass associated with increased yields of solid char and decreased yields of volatiles, as well as a greater opportunity for secondary reactions between the residue and the pyrolysis products. Hence, it is difficult to relate the products of organic matter thermally degraded at <100 degrees C min(-1) in TGA to the products of flash pyrolysis at up to 20,000 degrees C s(-1). We have developed and applied a novel methodology for quantitative flash pyrolysis-FTIR analysis of the volatile pyrolysis products of organic-rich materials. Calibration curves of water, carbon dioxide and methane have been constructed and used to determine absolute volatile release from wood (ash, Lat. Fraxinus). This technique is quicker and simpler than comparable pyrolysis-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry techniques, and avoids errors associated with the lower rates of temperature increase associated with techniques such as thermogravimetric analysis.


Astrobiology | 2015

The moon as a recorder of organic evolution in the early solar system: a lunar regolith analog study

Richard Matthewman; Richard W. Court; Ian A. Crawford; Ap Jones; K. H. Joy; Mark A. Sephton

The organic record of Earth older than ∼3.8 Ga has been effectively erased. Some insight is provided to us by meteorites as well as remote and direct observations of asteroids and comets left over from the formation of the Solar System. These primitive objects provide a record of early chemical evolution and a sample of material that has been delivered to Earths surface throughout the past 4.5 billion years. Yet an effective chronicle of organic evolution on all Solar System objects, including that on planetary surfaces, is more difficult to find. Fortunately, early Earth would not have been the only recipient of organic matter-containing objects in the early Solar System. For example, a recently proposed model suggests the possibility that volatiles, including organic material, remain archived in buried paleoregolith deposits intercalated with lava flows on the Moon. Where asteroids and comets allow the study of processes before planet formation, the lunar record could extend that chronicle to early biological evolution on the planets. In this study, we use selected free and polymeric organic materials to assess the hypothesis that organic matter can survive the effects of heating in the lunar regolith by overlying lava flows. Results indicate that the presence of lunar regolith simulant appears to promote polymerization and, therefore, preservation of organic matter. Once polymerized, the mineral-hosted newly formed organic network is relatively protected from further thermal degradation. Our findings reveal the thermal conditions under which preservation of organic matter on the Moon is viable.


International Journal of Astrobiology | 2012

Insights into the nature of cometary organic matter from terrestrial analogues

Richard W. Court; Mark A. Sephton

The nature of cometary organic matter is of great interest to investigations involving the formation and distribution of organic matter relevant to the origin of life. We have used pyrolysis–Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy to investigate the chemical effects of the irradiation of naturally occurring bitumens, and to relate their products of pyrolysis to their parent assemblages. The information acquired has then been applied to the complex organic matter present in cometary nuclei and comae. Amalgamating the FTIR data presented here with data from published studies enables the inference of other comprehensive trends within hydrocarbon mixtures as they are progressively irradiated in a cometary environment, namely the polymerization of lower molecular weight compounds; an increased abundance of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon structures; enrichment in 13 C; reduction in atomic H/C ratio; elevation of atomic O/C ratio and increase in the temperature required for thermal degradation. The dark carbonaceous surface of a cometary nucleus will display extreme levels of these features, relative to the nucleus interior, while material in the coma will reflect the degree of irradiation experienced by its source location in the nucleus. Cometary comae with high methane/water ratios indicate a nucleus enriched in methane, favouring the formation of complex organic matter via radiation-induced polymerization of simple precursors. In contrast, production of complex organic matter is hindered in a nucleus possessing a low methane/water ration, with the complex organic matter that does form possessing more oxygen-containing species, such as alcohol, carbonyl and carboxylic acid functional groups, resulting from reactions with hydroxyl radicals formed by the radiolysis of the more abundant water. These insights into the properties of complex cometary organic matter should be of particular interest to both remote observation and space missions involving in situ analyses and sample return of cometary materials.


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2006

The alteration of organic matter in response to ionising irradiation: Chemical trends and implications for extraterrestrial sample analysis

Richard W. Court; Mark A. Sephton; John Parnell; I. Gilmour


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2009

Investigating the contribution of methane produced by ablating micrometeorites to the atmosphere of Mars

Richard W. Court; Mark A. Sephton


Journal of Analytical and Applied Pyrolysis | 2008

The thermal alteration by pyrolysis of the organic component of small projectiles of mudrock during capture at hypervelocity

Stephen A. Bowden; Richard W. Court; Daniel Milner; Emily C. Baldwin; Paula Lindgren; Ian A. Crawford; John Parnell; Mark J. Burchell


Fuel | 2015

A new rapid method for shale oil and shale gas assessment

Miriam C. Wright; Richard W. Court; Fotios-Christos A. Kafantaris; Fivos Spathopoulos; Mark A. Sephton


Planetary and Space Science | 2012

Development status of the life marker chip instrument for ExoMars

Mark R. Sims; David C. Cullen; Catherine S. Rix; Alan Buckley; Mariliza Derveni; Daniel Evans; Luis Miguel García‐Con; Andrew Rhodes; Carla Cristina Pereira Salgueiro Catarino Rato; Marijan Stefinovic; Mark A. Sephton; Richard W. Court; Christopher Bulloch; Ian Kitchingman; Zeshan Ali; Derek Pullan; J. Holt; Oliver Blake; J. Sykes; Piyal Samara-Ratna; Massimiliano Canali; Guus Borst; Henk Leeuwis; Albert Prak; Aleandro Norfini; Ennio Geraci; Marco Tavanti; John Robert Brucato; Nils G. Holm


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2009

Meteorite ablation products and their contribution to the atmospheres of terrestrial planets: An experimental study using pyrolysis-FTIR

Richard W. Court; Mark A. Sephton


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2007

Raman spectroscopy of irradiated organic matter

Richard W. Court; Mark A. Sephton; John Parnell; I. Gilmour

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Mark R. Sims

University of Leicester

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Alexandre Bennett

Defence Science and Technology Laboratory

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David R. Payne

Defence Science and Technology Laboratory

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