Research & Development

LZH demonstrates laser method to prospect undersea minerals

01 Apr 2020

EU-funded project ROBUST examining marine soil samples on Pacific floor non-destructively.

Localizing mineral resources on the seafloor has so far been associated with very high costs. In the EU project ROBUST, the Laser Zentrum Hannover (LZH), together with eight other partners, developed a laser-based analysis system to examine soil samples in the deep sea almost non-destructively. The system has passed initial practical tests).

The system for laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) makes it possible to examine material samples for their atomic composition almost non-destructively. The LIBS system developed by the LZH successfully withstood a pressure of 400 bar in practical tests in the deep sea. Lasers, controls and software worked perfectly).

The experiments were carried out during a research trip in the Pacific on the research ship SONNE of the Federal Ministry of Education and Research. On the ROV Kiel 6000 diving robot from the GEOMAR Helmholtz Center for Ocean Research Kiel, the LIBS system dived to the bottom of the sea).

The LIBS system was able to detect copper and zinc in real massive sulfide samples at up to 500 bar. The measurements under deep-sea conditions took place at the company Nautilus in Buxtehude.

During a research trip in the Baltic Sea on GEOMAR's Littorina research ship, the system was able to reliably detect copper and zinc in the prepared samples even in relatively cloudy water. These are promising bases for further experiments under real conditions in the deep sea.

LIBS is a non-contact and almost non-destructive method for the analysis of chemical elements. Solids, liquids and gases can be examined with it. The method is based on the generation and analysis of a laser-induced plasma. Here, a high-energy laser beam is focused on the sample.

The energy of the laser beam at the focal point is so great that a plasma is created. The plasma in turn emits element-specific radiation, which is measured with a spectroscope. The emission lines in the spectrum can be assigned to the chemical elements of the sample.

The project Robotic Subsea Exploration Technologies - ROBUST (grant number: 690416) is funded by the European Union within the scope of the Horizon 2020 program.