A new thermodynamic analysis of the intergrowth of
详细信息   在线全文   PDF全文下载
  • journal_title:American Mineralogist
  • Contributor:Jiawen Hu ; Shide Mao ; Guoqiang Du ; Yunxia Wu ; Pu Zhang
  • Publisher:Mineralogical Society of America
  • Date:2011-
  • Format:text/html
  • Language:en
  • Identifier:10.2138/am.2011.3549
  • journal_abbrev:American Mineralogist
  • issn:0003-004X
  • volume:96
  • issue:4
  • firstpage:599
  • section:Articles
摘要

Some errors and metastable phase relations are found in a recently reported oxygen fugacity–silica activity [logfO2-loga(SiO2)] diagram of the fayalite-kirschsteinite-hedenbergite-magnetite-wollastonite (Fa-Kst-Hd-Mt-Wo) system at 400 °C and 1 kbar (Markl et al. 2001). Systematic thermodynamic analysis reveals that the composite exsolution lamellae of Mt and Hd in the olivine from the Ilimaussaq Intrusion, Greenland, should form when the reaction 3Fa+3Kst+O2 = 3Hd+2Mt is overstepped on rapid cooling. This process is also accompanied by favorable fO2 and a(SiO2) conditions. It is also found that the reaction mechanisms from Ca-Fe-rich olivine (Fa+Kst) to Mt+Hd are very different above and below the equilibrium temperature of the Mt-absent reaction Hd+Kst = Fa+2Wo. The mechanisms above the equilibrium temperature are obviously simpler than those below the equilibrium temperature. Despite this difference, the two types of mechanisms have many features in common: (1) Mt and Hd can form in Ca-Fe-rich olivine on continuous cooling; (2) If a(SiO2) is not buffered, an increase in fO2 alone is enough to transform Ca-Fe-rich olivine into Mt and Hd; (3) At a fixed fO2 or a(SiO2), the formation of Mt and/or Hd on cooling requires appropriate a(SiO2) or fO2; and (4) The increase in a(SiO2) is favorable to the formation of Hd, but it is not essential for the intergrown exsolution of Mt and Hd. These common features are closely related to the fact that the process from Fa+Kst to Mt+Hd is an entropy decreasing oxidation reaction.

© 2004-2018 中国地质图书馆版权所有 京ICP备05064691号 京公网安备11010802017129号

地址:北京市海淀区学院路29号 邮编:100083

电话:办公室:(+86 10)66554848;文献借阅、咨询服务、科技查新:66554700