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Pressure and temperature-dependence of water solubility in Fe-free wadsleyite

✍ Scribed by Demouchy, S.


Book ID
121358638
Publisher
Mineralogical Society of America
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
285 KB
Volume
90
Category
Article
ISSN
0003-004X

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✦ Synopsis


The effects of temperature and pressure on water solubility in wadsleyite in the system MgO-SiO 2 -H 2 O were investigated. Experiments were carried out using a 1000 ton multi-anvil press. One series of experiments was performed at a Þ xed pressure of 15 GPa and at various temperatures and in a second series the temperature was Þ xed at 1200 Β°C and pressure was varied from 13 to 18 GPa. The starting material was a mixture of oxides and hydroxides equivalent to the composition Mg 2 SiO 4 + 5 wt% H 2 O. Run products consisted of wadsleyite, quenched hydrous melt, and minor amounts of clinoenstatite. The water content of wadsleyite was quantiÞ ed by ion probe. Results show that at 15 GPa, the water solubility in wadsleyite decreases signiÞ cantly with increasing temperature from ~2.2 wt% H 2 O at 900 Β°C down to ~0.9 wt% H 2 O at 1400 Β°C; the corresponding Mg/Si ratios increase from 1.80 to 1.91 over this temperature range. This effect appears to be largely due to changes in the water activity in the coexisting melt. The partition coefÞ cient of water between wadsleyite and coexisting melt is nearly independent of temperature with D wa wa ds ter leyite/melt β‰ˆ 0.08. No signiÞ cant effect of pressure on water solubility was observed at 1200 Β°C. Our data suggest that the water storage capacity of wadsleyite in the transition zone is much lower than previously suggested. Together with previous results on ringwoodite, our data imply a strong decrease of the water partition coefÞ cient between wadsleyite and ringwoodite with temperature. This decrease could have two important consequences: (1) The width of the 520 km discontinuity may vary strongly as a function of temperature. (2) During cooling of the EarthΚΌs mantle since the Hadean, water may have increasingly partitioned from the lower into the upper part of the transition zone.


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