Very large differences in intramolecular D-H partitioning in hydrated silicate melts synthesized at upper mantle pressures and temperatures

2015 ◽  
Vol 100 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 1182-1189 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ying Wang ◽  
Samantha X. Cody ◽  
Dionysis Foustoukos ◽  
Bjorn O. Mysen ◽  
George D. Cody
2014 ◽  
Vol 125 ◽  
pp. 1-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xingcheng Liu ◽  
Xiaolin Xiong ◽  
Andreas Audétat ◽  
Yuan Li ◽  
Maoshuang Song ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

1991 ◽  
Vol 55 (378) ◽  
pp. 95-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. E. Lloyd ◽  
A. D. Edgar ◽  
D. M. Forsyth ◽  
R. L. Barnett

AbstractGroup I xenoliths, orthopyroxene-rich and orthopyroxene-free, contain Cr-spinel and clinopyroxene ± phlogopite, and occur together with Group II clinopyroxenites ± Ti-spinel ± phlogopite in K-mafic pyroclastics southeast of Gees. The petrography and clinopyroxene chemistry of orthopyroxene-rich (opx-rich sub-group) Group I xenoliths is consistent with an ‘original’ harzburgitic mantle that has been transformed to lherzolite by the addition of endiopside. In harzburgites, orthopyroxenes are reacting to diopside + olivine + alkali-silicate melt, and, by inference, the orthopyroxene-free (opx-free subgroup) Group I, dunite-wehrlite series can be linked to the opx-rich sub-group via this reaction. Progressive enrichment of dunitic material in endiopside-diopside has resulted in the formation of wehrlite. Phlogopite is titaniferous and occurs as a trace mineral in opx-rich, Group I xenoliths, whereas substantial phlogopite vein-networks are confined to the opx-free sub-group (dunite-wehrlite series). Interstitial, alkali-felsic glass occurs are veins within, and as extensions of, the phlogopite networks. Clinopyroxenes in phlogopite-veined xenoliths are decreased in Mg/(Mg + FeTotal) (mg) and Cr and increased in Ti, Al and Ca, compared with clinopyroxenes in xenoliths which have trace phlogopite. It is proposed that harzburgitic and dunitic mantle has been infiltrated by a Ca- and alkalirich, hydrous silicate melt rather than an ephemeral carbonatite melt. Dunite has been transformed to phlogopite wehrlite by the invasion of a Ca-, Al-, Ti- and K-rich, hydrous silicate melt. Ca-activity was high initially in the melt and was reduced by clinopyroxene precipitation. This resulted in enhanced K-activity which led to phlogopite veining of clinopyroxene-rich mantle. Group II phlogopite clinopyroxenites contain Ti-spinel and salites that are distinct in their Ti, Al and Cr contents from endiopsides and diopsides in Group I xenoliths. It is unlikely that these Group II xenoliths represent the culmination of the infiltration processes that have transformed dunite to wehrlite, nor can they be related to the host melt. These xenoliths may have crystallised from Ca- and K-bearing, hydrous silicate melts in mantle channelways buffered by previously precipitated clinopyroxene and phlogopite. Gees lherzolites contain pyroxenes and spinel with distinctly lower Al contents than these same minerals in lherzolites described previously from other West Eifel localities, which may reflect a distinctive lithology and/or processes of modification for the Gees mantle.


2014 ◽  
Vol 393 ◽  
pp. 31-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wim J. Malfait ◽  
Rita Seifert ◽  
Sylvain Petitgirard ◽  
Mohamed Mezouar ◽  
Carmen Sanchez-Valle
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roberta Spallanzani ◽  
Sarah B. Cichy ◽  
Marcus Oelze ◽  
Kenneth Koga ◽  
Max Wilke ◽  
...  

<p>Magmatic volatiles play a major role in controlling magma dynamics, such as ascent characteristics and eruption style. In order to fully understand their influence in magmatic systems, it is crucial to examine their behaviour within silicate melts. Although numerous studies have been conducted on volatile solubility, exsolution and degassing, some aspects of  magma degassing such as bubble formation, bubble growth and the affect on the distribution of fluid-mobile elements are poorly understood. For instance, magma degassing is likely to affect the abundance and dispersion of fluid-mobile elements, such as Li and B, in the magma. Thus, this study focuses on the diffusivity of Li and B in hydrated silicate melt as a proxy for degassing processes.</p><p>Lithium and boron are particularly suitable as geochemical tracers of degassing processes because they are light elements, present in natural volcanic systems in low concentrations, and have similar characteristics: both elements are fluid-mobile and each has two stable isotopes with different transport behaviours due to their atomic weights, which can lead to isotope fractionation. In order to successfully model their behaviour during magmatic ascent, their diffusivities in silicate melts have to be well constrained.</p><p>Diffusion data in hydrous settings are missing or underrepresented: very little studies have been conducted on boron diffusivity, the literature gives contradictory diffusion coefficients for lithium. In this study, we focus on elemental diffusion and isotopic fractionation of lithium and boron in hydrated silica-rich melts, in order to better understand B diffusivity and solve the discrepancies about Li data.</p><p>Sets of diffusion-couple experiments on synthetic water-bearing rhyolitic glasses have been performed, using an internally heated pressure vessel, at a constant pressure of 300 MPa and temperatures of 700°, 800° and 1000° C, with durations of 0 seconds, 30 minutes, 2 hours and 4 hours. Lithium and boron elemental concentrations have been measured by LA-ICP-MS, resulting in 600 μm long profiles, while isotopic ratios are being evaluated by SIMS analysis.</p><p>The zero-hour experiment indicates that lithium diffuses very rapidly, potentially already at temperatures below 700° C (during the heating process), while boron diffusion is generally slower, hence the necessity of higher temperatures and longer experimental run durations. Overall, our experimental results confirm previous literatue findings that Li diffuses faster in water-bearing melts, and give first constraints on boron diffusivity in hydrated silicate melts, whereas previous studies only considered anhydrous samples. The determination of diffusion coefficients of the two elements gives us a better understanding of the diffusion timescales. This information allows us to interpret additional decompression experiments, simulating a wide range of magma ascent rates, and to correlate the elemental and isotopic behaviour of lithium and boron with decompression-induced bubble formation processes.</p>


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