Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9529032 | Chemical Geology | 2005 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
The results of a study of isotopic fractionation of boron between silica-rich (LS) and borate-rich (LB) immiscible liquids in the system Si-B-Al-Ca-Na are reported. Partitioning experiments were performed on glasses produced by quenching immiscible coexisting Si-rich and B-rich borosilicate melt pairs that had been equilibrated at high temperature and separated with the aid of a high temperature centrifuge furnace [Veksler, I.V., Dorfman, A.M., Dingwell, D.B., Zotov, N., 2002. Element partitioning between immiscible borosilicate liquids: a high-temperature centrifuge study. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 66, 2603-2614]. Here B/Si and 11B/10B ratios have been determined using secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS). The determinations encountered unexpectedly strong matrix effect (up to 12â°) due to contrasting chemical compositions of the immiscible melts. Employment of â 60 V high-voltage offset (not used during routine SIMS B isotope measurements) effectively eliminated the initially observed matrix effect. With this improved SIMS technique, we obtained the result that the coexisting quenched immiscible liquids have the same 11B/10B ratio within ± 1.2â° (2Ï) analytical uncertainty. Thus little or no significant two-liquid fractionation of 10B and 11B isotopes was observed in the temperature range between 950 and 1350 °C. This is despite the observation that significantly different proportions of trigonal vs. tetrahedrally coordinated B in these immiscible liquids have been determined by Raman spectroscopic analyses. The essential observations (i.e., a strong matrix effect and a lack of significant B isotope fractionation between the glasses) were both supported by independent thermal ionization mass spectrometry (TIMS) analyses of one selected centrifuged pair. Those glasses showed no difference in B isotopic composition within the quoted 2Ï analytical error of ± 1.0â°.
Related Topics
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Authors
A.A. Gurenko, I.V. Veksler, A. Meixner, R. Thomas, A.M. Dorfman, D.B. Dingwell,