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Speciation of and D/H partitioning between fluids and melts in silicate-D-O-H-C-N systems determined in-situ at upper mantle temperatures, pressures, and redox conditions

Bjorn O. Mysen, Tokio Tomita, Eiji Ohtani and Akio Suzuki
Speciation of and D/H partitioning between fluids and melts in silicate-D-O-H-C-N systems determined in-situ at upper mantle temperatures, pressures, and redox conditions
American Mineralogist (April 2014) 99 (4): 578-588

Abstract

Speciation of D-O-H-C-N volatiles in alkali aluminosilicate melts and of silicate in D-O-H-C-N fluid has been determined in situ to 800 degrees C and >2 GPa under reducing and oxidizing conditions by using an externally heated hydrothermal diamond-anvil cell with Raman spectroscopy as the structural probe. Reducing conditions were near those of the IW oxygen buffer, whereas oxidizing conditions were obtained by conducting the experiments with oxidized components only and with Pt as a catalyst. Raman bands assigned to C-H stretching in CH (sub x) D (sub y) isotopologues and CH (sub 4) groups (including CH (sub 3) ) were employed to determine the CH (sub 4) /CH (sub x) D (sub y) ratio in fluids and melts. This ratio decreases from 1.5-2 at 500 degrees C to between 1.2 and 1 with 800 degrees C with Delta H-values of 13.6 + or - 2.1 and 5.5 + or - 1.1 kJ/mol for melt and fluid, respectively. The CH (sub 4) /CH (sub x) D (sub y) fluid/melt partition coefficient ranges between approximately 16 and approximately 3 with Delta H = 33 + or - 6 kJ/mol assuming no pressure effect. This behavior of deuterated and protonated complexes is ascribed to speciation of volatile and silicate components in fluids and melts in a manner that is conceptually similar to D/H partitioning among complexes and phases in brines and hydrous silicate systems. Molecular N (sub 2) is the N-bearing species in fluids and melts under oxidizing conditions. Under reducing conditions, the dominant species are molecular NH (sub 3) and ammine groups, NH (sub 2) (super -) . The NH (sub 3) /NH (sub 2) ratio varies between 0.15 and 0.75 in the 425-800 degrees C temperature range. The enthalpy change of the ammonia/ammine equilibrium, Delta H, derived from the temperature and assuming no pressure effect on the equilibrium, is 19 + or - 8 and 61 + or - 9 kJ/mol for melt and fluid, respectively. The fluid/melt partition coefficient, (NH (sub 3) + NH (sub 2) (super -) ) (super fluid) /(NH (sub 3) + NH (sub 2) (super -) ) (super melt) , ranges from 8 to 3 with Delta H = 45 + or - 12 kJ/mol. For oxidized nitrogen, the fluid/melt partition coefficient is twice or more of those values for reduced nitrogen. Hydrogen bonding can be detected at 500 degrees C and below. This behavior resembles that of H (sub 2) O. Deuterium-containing analogues of the (N+H)-species could not be detected with precision because these were in the frequency-range of the second-order Raman shift of diamond in the diamond-anvil cell itself and could not be isolated from the strong background generated by the Raman intensity from the diamond. These results imply that, unlike noble gases, degassing of N-bearing species from the mantle is redox dependent, and is also more efficient at lower temperatures (shallow depths). Reduced and oxidized C-O-H-N species exist fluids and melts in the modern mantle, whereas reduced species dominated in the young Earth. The f (sub H) (sub 2) -dependent speciation C-O-H-N volatile components result in f (sub H) (sub 2) -dependent thermodynamic and transport properties of fluids and melts in the interior of the Earth and terrestrial planets. In fluids, the solubility of nominally incompatible trace elements can increase by orders of magnitude upon its saturation with silicate components. Trace element and stable isotope partitioning between fluids and melt can change by >100% for the same reason.


ISSN: 0003-004X
EISSN: 1945-3027
Coden: AMMIAY
Serial Title: American Mineralogist
Serial Volume: 99
Serial Issue: 4
Title: Speciation of and D/H partitioning between fluids and melts in silicate-D-O-H-C-N systems determined in-situ at upper mantle temperatures, pressures, and redox conditions
Affiliation: Carnegie Instistution, Geophysical Laboratory, Washington, DC, United States
Pages: 578-588
Published: 201404
Text Language: English
Publisher: Mineralogical Society of America, Washington, DC, United States
References: 62
Accession Number: 2014-030293
Categories: Isotope geochemistry
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Illustration Description: illus.
Secondary Affiliation: Tohoku University, JPN, Japan
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2017, American Geosciences Institute. Abstract, copyright, Mineralogical Society of America. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States
Update Code: 201419
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