Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4702150 Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 2014 21 Pages PDF
Abstract
The hydration number (y) increases with increasing pressure, thereby indicating that solvation by H2O molecules in the gas-phase is analogous to that in liquid-like fluids. Results of extrapolation of the data using a linear relationship of log Ks,y with reciprocal temperature compare well with published experimental data for the solubility of gold at 1000 °C in dilute HCl-bearing water vapour. At high water vapour pressure, the solubility of gold in an aqueous vapour with an HCl fugacity of 0.1 bar is similar to that in a vapour with approximately 50 bar H2S, in which AuS is the dominant gaseous gold species. This indicates that hydrated gold monochloride species may play an important role in magmatic-hydrothermal systems dominated by low density aqueous fluids with high HCl concentrations. Modelling of the cooling and decompression of HCl-bearing intermediate-density (0.35 g cm−3) aqueous fluids shows that gold solubility reaches a maximum of 253 ppm at 500 °C. In fluids with densities of 0.20 and 0.10 g cm−3 the corresponding solubility maxima are reached at ∼400 °C, and are of 14.8 and 0.49 ppm, respectively.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geochemistry and Petrology
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