Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4717398 | Lithos | 2008 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
Dehydroxylation of omphacites in eclogites from UHP Dabie-Sulu terrain has been investigated using a combined method of petrological observations, mineral chemistry, heat treatment, Mössbauer, and micro-FTIR spectroscopy. Progressive heating of omphacite in air up to 1100 °C results in complex, multi-stage processes involving oxidation and dehydrogenation at different temperatures. During heating, Fe2+ at the M1 site is oxidized to Fe3+, accompanied by a decrease in the intensity of the 3460 cmâ 1 OH band. This reaction can be described as Fe2+(M1) + (OH)â = Fe3+(M1) + O2â(O3) + 1/2H2, and most likely represents loss of H bonded to O1 adjacent to the M1 site. At higher temperatures, continued oxidation results in further dehydroxylation due to H loss from OH bands 3530 cmâ 1 and 3630 cmâ 1. These bands represent H defects with higher thermal stability/slower diffusivity. In this case, oxidation of Fe2+ provides a means for charge-balancing H loss over the whole crystal structure, rather than locally. OH bands at 3530 and 3630 cmâ 1 are consistent with H incorporation onto O2, with vibration of OH dipoles towards adjacent tetrahedral vacancies. Rapid loss of H during annealing at even low temperatures implies that significant H loss from eclogites occurs during exhumation. Furthermore, changes in relative OH band intensity are expected during exhumation due to different thermal behaviour of H defects in omphacite. As such, the ratio of OH bands in omphacite spectra could be used to deduce exhumation conditions.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geochemistry and Petrology
Authors
Wen Su, Ming Zhang, Simon A.T. Redfern, Geoffrey D. Bromiley,