Properties of molten CaCO3 at high pressure
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Abstract
Li, Z., Li, J., Lange, R., Liu, J., Militzer, B. (2017) Determination of calcium carbonate and sodium carbonate melting curves up to Earth’s transition zone pressures with implications for the deep carbon cycle. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 457, 395-402.
), which implies that the reported flattening of the melting curve followed by a slightly negative curve above 8 GPa cannot be due to crystal-melt density inversion. Instead, the enthalpy of fusion is likely responsible, and we note the peculiar high diffusivity of oxygen in crystalline calcite-V in this regard, with further implications for the mobility of carbonate melts at depth.Figures and Tables
Figure 1 (a) Structure factors, S(q), of molten CaCO3; curves are stacked to see better the evolution with increased P-T conditions (given on the right panel); the main change affecting S(q) (Fig. 1a) is the shift of the first sharp diffraction peak (FSDP) towards higher reciprocal distances, up to 2.28 Å-1 at 8.7 GPa which corresponds in the real space to a characteristic mid-range order distance, , of 2.76 Å. (b) Corresponding radial distribution functions (plain curves), g(r), compared to MD simulations (dashed curve; Vuilleumier et al., 2014). | Figure 2 Density of molten CaCO3 from experiments (circles: this work, squares: Dobson et al., 1996) and theoretical calculations (Genge et al., 1995; Vuilleumier et al., 2014; Li et al., 2017), compared to the seismological PREM model (Dziewonski and Anderson, 1981), crystalline calcite V (Li et al., 2017), molten hydrous and dry rhyolite (Malfait et al., 2014), molten hydrous and dry basalt (Sakamaki et al., 2006). | Figure 3 Bulk modulus of molten CaCO3 as a function of P (black: 1773 K, red: 1923 K, orange: 2073 K, orange empty circles: 1773 K and 1923 K data corrected for T = 2073 K). |
Figure 1 | Figure 2 | Figure 3 |
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Introduction
The geological importance of carbonate melts is linked to their low melting points compared to silicates, and hence their key role in triggering melting at depth (Jones et al., 2013
Jones, A.G., Genge, M., Carmody, L. (2013) Carbonate melts and carbonatites. Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry 75, 289-322.
). As such, the properties of carbonate melts are key in processes ranging from incipient melting at the oceanic lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary and lubrication of tectonic plates (Gaillard et al., 2008Gaillard, F., Malki, M., Iacono-Marziano, G., Pichavant, M., Scaillet, B. (2008) Carbonatite melts and electrical conductivity in the asthenosphere. Science 322, 1363-1365.
), to pervasive metasomatism of the continental lithospheric roots (Foley, 2008Foley, S.F. (2008) Rejuvenation and erosion of the cratonic lithosphere. Nature Geoscience 1, 503-510.
).Experimental measurements of the physical properties of molten carbonates under high pressures (P) are very scarce however. This contrasts with the advances in knowledge on silicate melts under P over the last decade, as reviewed in Kono and Sanloup (2018)
Kono, Y., Sanloup, C. (2018) Magmas under Pressure: Advances in High-Pressure Experiments on Structure and Properties of Melts. Elsevier, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
, and is due to the extreme difficulty in confining such low-viscosity melts for long durations. Structural data at ambient P have been collected on Li2CO3, K2CO3, LiKCO3 melts using neutron diffraction (Kohara et al., 1998Kohara, S., Badyal, Y.S., Kouray, N., Idemotoy, Y., Takahashi, S., Curtiss, L.A., Saboungi, M.-L. (1998) The structure of molten alkali carbonates studied by neutron diffraction and ab initio calculations. Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter 10, 3301-3308.
), and Na2CO3 using X-ray diffraction (Wilding et al., 2016Wilding, M.C., Wilson, M., Alderman, O.L.G., Benmore, C., Weber, J.K.R., Parise, J.B., Tamalonis, A., Skinner, L. (2016) Low-dimensional network formation in molten sodium carbonate. Scientific Reports 6, 24415.
). The effect of P on melt compaction, i.e. the bulk modulus, has been assessed for alkali carbonate melts by combining ambient P density and acoustic velocity measurements (Liu and Lange, 2003Liu, Q., Lange, R.A. (2003) New density measurements on carbonate liquids and the partial molar volume of the CaCO3 component. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 146, 370-381.
), and from the melting curve for K2CO3 (Liu et al., 2007Liu, Q., Tenner, T.J., Lange, R.A. (2007) Do carbonate liquids become denser than silicate liquids at pressure? Constraints from the fusion curve of K2CO3 to 3.2 GPa. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 153, 55-66.
). In situ high P density measurements are restricted to two P points for molten K2Ca(CO3)2 (2.75 g∙cm-3 at 2.5 GPa-950 ℃, 2.58 g∙cm-3 at 2.5 GPa-1150 ℃, and 2.80 g∙cm-3 at 4 GPa-1050 ℃) using the falling sphere technique (Dobson et al., 1996Dobson, D.P., Jones, A.P., Rabe, R., Sekine, T., Kurita, K., Taniguchi, T., Kondo, T., Kato, T., Shimomura, O., Urakawa, S. (1996) In-situ measurement of viscosity and density of carbonate melts at high pressure. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 143, 207-215.
). These first in situ density measurements were complemented by a study of the viscosity of K2Ca(CO3)2 and K2Mg(CO3)2 melts up to 5.5 GPa (Dobson et al., 1996Dobson, D.P., Jones, A.P., Rabe, R., Sekine, T., Kurita, K., Taniguchi, T., Kondo, T., Kato, T., Shimomura, O., Urakawa, S. (1996) In-situ measurement of viscosity and density of carbonate melts at high pressure. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 143, 207-215.
). Such viscosity measurements were very challenging at the time, i.e. before the advent of high speed cameras required to accurately capture rapidly falling spheres. The ultralow viscosity, i.e. two orders of magnitude lower than for molten basalt at 1900 K, was nonetheless confirmed for calcite and dolomite melts (Kono et al., 2014Kono, Y., Park, C., Kenney-Benson, C., Shen, G., Wang, Y. (2014) Toward comprehensive studies of liquids at high pressures and high temperatures: Combined structure, elastic wave velocity, and viscosity measurements in the Paris-Edinburgh cell. Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 228, 269-280.
), with no P effect observed up to 6.2 GPa. This latter study also reported the structure of CaCO3 melts but information was restricted to distances greater than 2 Å, excluding the C-O bond.In contrast, there are several reported melting curve measurements, as these do not require long experiments and sample integrity can be preserved. Of particular interest is the report of a flattening of the CaCO3 melting curve at 8 GPa followed by a slightly negative slope up to the calcite-aragonite-melt triple point at 13 GPa (Li et al., 2017
Li, Z., Li, J., Lange, R., Liu, J., Militzer, B. (2017) Determination of calcium carbonate and sodium carbonate melting curves up to Earth’s transition zone pressures with implications for the deep carbon cycle. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 457, 395-402.
). This evolution is unique amongst carbonates, with stronger and positive slopes reported for Na2CO3 and MgCO3 (Li et al., 2017Li, Z., Li, J., Lange, R., Liu, J., Militzer, B. (2017) Determination of calcium carbonate and sodium carbonate melting curves up to Earth’s transition zone pressures with implications for the deep carbon cycle. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 457, 395-402.
). The flattening of the CaCO3 melting curve was attributed to a density crossover between solid and liquid CaCO3. However, such crossover is only predicted theoretically near 17 GPa, and this discrepancy was attributed to approximations in the ab initio calculations, highlighting the need for further experimental measurements of melt density.We report here structural and density data on molten CaCO3 from in situ X-ray diffraction up to 8.7 GPa and 2073 K, an experimental P-T range that corresponds to upper mantle conditions. Attempts to collect data on molten Na2CO3, K2CO3, and carbonate mixtures failed, and consequently no results are reported here for these compositions. This might indicate that these compositions have even lower viscosities than pure CaCO3 melt, resulting in escape of the molten carbonates from the graphite capsule.
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Structural Data
In situ energy-dispersive X-ray diffraction data were collected under high P-T conditions (Table S-1) using a Paris-Edinburgh press. The structure factor, S(q), was derived from the X-ray diffraction patterns (Supplementary Information, SI). The g(r) radial distribution function, a measure of the probability of finding an atom as a function of the radial distance r, was obtained by Fourier Transform of the spline smoothened S(q).
where is the atomic density in atoms per Å3, is Avogadro’s constant, M = 100.1 g/mol is the mean atomic molar mass of calcite, and ρ its mass density (see below). The first peak in g(r) is the C-O intramolecular contribution, which is not expected to change significantly over this P-T range. The second peak in g(r) corresponds to the sum of the O-O and Ca-O first neighbour contributions at ∼2.3 Å, and the third peak to the sum of the second Ca-O and first Ca-Ca contributions (∼4.0 Å). The most pronounced changes in g(r) (Fig. 1b) with P are at 3 Å, with an increase of intensity related to the intermolecular O-O distance, and the growth of a shoulder around 3.45-3.5 Å related to the Ca-Ca intermolecular contribution. These observations are consistent with the shrinkage of interatomic distance, most pronounced for Ca-Ca (from 4 Å at ambient P), and increase in intensity predicted for both contributions by molecular dynamics (MD) calculations (Vuilleumier et al., 2014
Vuilleumier, R., Seitsonen, A., Sator, N., Guillot, B. (2014) Structure, equation of state and transport properties of molten calcium carbonate (CaCO3) by atomistic simulations. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 141, 547-566.
), as a result of intermolecular packing upon compression. In contrast, intramolecular distances do not change significantly. The intermolecular packing also explains the observed shift of the first sharp diffraction peak in S(q) (Fig. 1a). Concomitantly, MD simulations indicate a gradual increase of the number of carbonate ions around Ca from 6 as in calcite to 9 as in aragonite. It is not possible to estimate the Ca-C coordination number from the present data due to the prominence of the major contributions of neighbouring Ca-O and Ca-Ca. However, correspondence between Vuilleumier et al. (2014)Vuilleumier, R., Seitsonen, A., Sator, N., Guillot, B. (2014) Structure, equation of state and transport properties of molten calcium carbonate (CaCO3) by atomistic simulations. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 141, 547-566.
MD simulations and our results supports their conclusions, i.e. the P-evolution of the liquid structure smoothes out the abrupt changes occurring across the underlying crystalline calcite V-aragonite transition.top
Density Evolution
The density of CaCO3 melts (Fig. 2) is calculated from the area below the C-O contribution to the radial distribution function (Eq. 1 and SI). C is coordinated by three O in the studied P-T range, but C becomes tetrahedrally coordinated above 50 GPa in crystalline MgCO3 (Oganov et al., 2008
Oganov, A.R., Ono, S., Ma, Y., Glass, C.W., Garcia, A. (2008) Novel high pressure structures of MgCO3, CaCO3 and CO2 and their role in Earth’s lower mantle. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 273, 38-47.
) and above 76 GPa in crystalline CaCO3 (Pickard and Needs, 2015Pickard, C.J., Needs, R.J. (2015) Structures and stability of calcium and magnesium carbonates at mantle pressures. Physical Review B 91, 104101.
). How this 3-fold to 4-fold transition translates at very high P in the molten state remains to be investigated. The calculated density values are consistent with MD simulations by Genge et al. (1995)Genge, M.J., Price, G.D., Jones, A.P. (1995) Molecular dynamics simulations of CaCO3 melts to mantle pressures and temperatures: implications for carbonatite magmas. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 131, 225-238.
, although the mismatch with more recent simulations (Vuilleumier et al., 2014Vuilleumier, R., Seitsonen, A., Sator, N., Guillot, B. (2014) Structure, equation of state and transport properties of molten calcium carbonate (CaCO3) by atomistic simulations. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 141, 547-566.
) is larger, but seems to be in agreement with ab initio calculations from Li et al. (2017)Li, Z., Li, J., Lange, R., Liu, J., Militzer, B. (2017) Determination of calcium carbonate and sodium carbonate melting curves up to Earth’s transition zone pressures with implications for the deep carbon cycle. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 457, 395-402.
.It is difficult to determine the isothermal bulk modulus, KT, by fitting an equation of state to only three data points on the 2073 K isotherm. An alternative method to assess KT (Egelstaff, 1994
Egelstaff, P.A. (1994) An Introduction to the Liquid State. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
) is by extrapolating S(q) to q = 0 Å-1 (Fig. S-2 and SI) as , where kB is Boltzmann’s constant. This method has been previously benchmarked for molten fayalite using the same experimental set up (Sanloup et al., 2013Sanloup, C., Drewitt, J.W.E., Cr´episson, C., Kono, Y., Park, C., McCammon, C., Hennet, L., Brassamin, S., Bytchkov, A. (2013) Structure and density of molten fayalite at high pressure. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 118, 118-128.
). Resulting KT values are provided on Figure 3, along with a correction of the two lowest P points to the 2073 K isotherm using dKT/dT = 0.02 K-1 from Genge et al. (1995)Genge, M.J., Price, G.D., Jones, A.P. (1995) Molecular dynamics simulations of CaCO3 melts to mantle pressures and temperatures: implications for carbonatite magmas. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 131, 225-238.
. At 8.7 GPa, the bulk modulus (80.6 ± 3.5 GPa) is identical to that of crystalline aragonite (79.5-81.3 GPa) using KT,0, K’ and dKT/dT values provided in Litasov et al. (2017)Litasov, K.D., Shatskiy, A., Gavryushkin, P.N., Bekhtenova, A.E., Dorogokupets, P.I., Danilov, B.S., Higo, Y., Akilbekov, A.T., Inerbaev, T.M. (2017) P-V-T equation of state of CaCO3 aragonite to 29 GPa and 1673 K: In situ X-ray diffraction study. Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 2654, 82-91.
, and although no high T data are available for calcite V, KT,0, K’ for aragonite is similar to that of calcite I (Redfern and Angel, 1999Redfern, S.A.T., Angel, R.J. (1999) High-pressure behaviour and equation of state of calcite, CaCO3. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 134, 102-106.
). Compared to silicate melts (Fig. 2), molten CaCO3 is less compressible than basalt (Sakamaki et al., 2006Sakamaki, T., Suzuki, A., Ohtani, E. (2006) Stability of hydrous melt at the base of the Earth’s upper mantle. Nature 439, 192-194.
) especially at high P, but is only approximately 5 % less dense than hydrous rhyolite (Malfait et al., 2014Malfait, W.J., Seifert, R., Petitgirard, S., Perrillat, J.-P., Mezouar, M., Ota, T., Nakamura, E., Lerch, P., Sanchez-Valle, C. (2014) Supervolcano eruptions driven by melt buoyancy in large silicic magma chambers. Nature Geoscience 7, 122-125.
), with a similar P-evolution (although the latter has only been investigated up to 4 GPa).top
Discussion
Our results confirm the liquid density of CaCO3 estimated from ab initio calculations (Li et al., 2017
Li, Z., Li, J., Lange, R., Liu, J., Militzer, B. (2017) Determination of calcium carbonate and sodium carbonate melting curves up to Earth’s transition zone pressures with implications for the deep carbon cycle. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 457, 395-402.
). There is no experimental data on the thermal equation of state of calcite V due to its very limited T-stability field (<200 K) and strong recrystallisation processes at high T (Suito et al., 2001Suito, K., Namba, J., Horikawa, T., Taniguchi, Y., Sakurai, N., Kobayashi, M., Onodera, A., Shimomura, O., Kikegawa, T. (2001) Phase relations of CaCO3 at high pressure and high temperature. American Mineralogist 86, 997-1002.
), but the good agreement between experimental and theoretical estimates of liquid density lends support to theoretical calcite V equation of state (Li et al., 2017Li, Z., Li, J., Lange, R., Liu, J., Militzer, B. (2017) Determination of calcium carbonate and sodium carbonate melting curves up to Earth’s transition zone pressures with implications for the deep carbon cycle. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 457, 395-402.
). Density crossover between solid and liquid phases may hence only occur at 17 GPa as predicted (Li et al., 2017Li, Z., Li, J., Lange, R., Liu, J., Militzer, B. (2017) Determination of calcium carbonate and sodium carbonate melting curves up to Earth’s transition zone pressures with implications for the deep carbon cycle. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 457, 395-402.
). The reason for the flattening of melting curve around 8 GPa, followed by a slightly negative slope up to the calcite V-aragonite-liquid triple point, may consequently be related to changes in the fusion enthalpy rather than a density crossover. Calcite V has a very peculiar molecular structure, with the oxygen sublattice being molten and the oxygen atoms diffusing along an undulated circular orbit (Ishizawa et al., 2013Ishizawa, N., Setoguchi, H., Yanagisawa, K. (2013) Structural evolution of calcite at high temperatures: Phase V unveiled. Scientific Reports 3, 2832.
). Such high diffusion of oxygen in crystalline CaCO3 phases is unique to calcite, and in particular, it does not occur in aragonite. Although it is not possible to probe this by X-ray diffraction, it is expected that the change of oxygen mobility also occurs in the molten state from calcite-like at low P to aragonite-like at high P. It appears this does not affect the viscosity of the melt vs. P (Kono et al., 2014Kono, Y., Park, C., Kenney-Benson, C., Shen, G., Wang, Y. (2014) Toward comprehensive studies of liquids at high pressures and high temperatures: Combined structure, elastic wave velocity, and viscosity measurements in the Paris-Edinburgh cell. Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 228, 269-280.
), as the latter is controlled by the diffusivity of the cations. Due to the gradual nature of the structural changes in the molten state, this highly diffusive state will decrease in the melt at lower P than it does in the crystalline state. Enhanced diffusive motion of oxygen in calcite V is consequently expected to cause a large enthalpy decrease upon melting into an aragonite-like high P liquid. Similarly, a strong increase of the melting enthalpy ΔH (i.e. TΔS) of water has been measured above 15 GPa and up to the ice VII-superionic ice X transition, associated with enhanced diffusion of H atoms in the liquid (Goncharov et al., 2009Goncharov, A.F., Sanloup, C., Goldman, N., Crowhurst, J.C., Bastea, S., Howard, W.M., Fried, L. E., Guignot, N., Mezouar, M., Meng, Y. (2009) Dissociative melting of ice VII at high pressure. Journal of Chemical Physics 130, 124514.
).The unique feature of the melting curve of CaCO3 amongst carbonates therefore seems related to the particularity of calcite V. The existence of a P range with negative melting curve related to variation in fusion enthalpy implies that adding heat to the system will freeze it. Corresponding geodynamical settings could be slab-derived melts entrained in upward plumes rising from the transition zone, as proposed for the generation of deep diamonds (Bulanova et al., 2010
Bulanova, G.P., Walter, M.J., Smith, C.B., Kohn, S.C., Armstrong, L.S., Blundy, J., Gobbo, L. (2010) Mineral inclusions in sublithospheric diamonds from Collier 4 kimberlite pipe, Juina, Brazil: subducted protoliths, carbonated melts and primary kimberlite magmatism. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 160, 489-510.
). Deep carbonate melts cannot indeed derive from melting in the peridotite + CO2 system but from subducted carbonaceous sediments or from metasomatised eclogites (Hammouda and Keshav, 2015Hammouda, T., Keshav, S. (2015) Melting in the mantle in the presence of carbon: Review of experiments and discussion on the origin of carbonatites. Chemical Geology 418, 171-188.
), keeping in mind that carbonatitic melts produced above 15 GPa get Mg-enriched while Ca-rich melts (Ca# = 0.68-0.70) are reported in the 8-14 GPa range (Thomson et al., 2016Thomson, A.R., Walter, M.J., Kohn, S.C., Brooker, R.A. (2016) Slab melting as a barrier to deep carbon subduction. Nature 529, 76-79.
), coincidental to the negative CaCO3 melting slope. The nature of deep diamond inclusions also points to the presence of Ca-rich protoliths or calcic melts at depths exceeding 300-350 km (Korsakov and Hermann, 2006Korsakov, A.K., Hermann, J. (2006) Silicate and carbonate melt inclusions associated with diamonds in deeply subducted carbonate rocks. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 241, 104-118.
; Bulanova et al., 2010Bulanova, G.P., Walter, M.J., Smith, C.B., Kohn, S.C., Armstrong, L.S., Blundy, J., Gobbo, L. (2010) Mineral inclusions in sublithospheric diamonds from Collier 4 kimberlite pipe, Juina, Brazil: subducted protoliths, carbonated melts and primary kimberlite magmatism. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 160, 489-510.
). Freezing of melts entrained in a plume might then explain the complex, broken and heavily deformed shapes of deep diamonds, indicating formation in a very viscous environment.Density and structural data are yet to be collected on other carbonate melts, including alkali compositions, in order to assess the properties of all natural compositions. This will require using faster density/structural probes, due to the challenge of confining such inviscid and highly reactive melts under pressure.
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Acknowledgements
We acknowledge funding from the European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreements no. 312284 and 259649 (European Research Council starting grant to C.S.). High pressure experiments were performed at HPCAT (Sector 16), Advanced Photon Source (APS), Argonne National Laboratory. HPCAT operation is supported by DOE-NNSA under Award No. DE-NA0001974, with partial instrumentation funding by NSF. The Advanced Photon Source is a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility operated for the DOE Office of Science by Argonne National Laboratory under Contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357. Y. K. acknowledges the support of DOE-BES/DMSE under Award DE-FG02-99ER45775 and support by the National Science Foundation under Award No. EAR-1722495. We acknowledge O. Boudouma for help with SEM analysis, and C. Kenney-Benson for providing cell-assembly parts. We thank an anonymous reviewer and T. Hammouda for thoughtful reviews of the manuscript.
Editor: Simon Redfern
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References
Bulanova, G.P., Walter, M.J., Smith, C.B., Kohn, S.C., Armstrong, L.S., Blundy, J., Gobbo, L. (2010) Mineral inclusions in sublithospheric diamonds from Collier 4 kimberlite pipe, Juina, Brazil: subducted protoliths, carbonated melts and primary kimberlite magmatism. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 160, 489-510.
Show in context
Corresponding geodynamical settings could be slab-derived melts entrained in upward plumes rising from the transition zone, as proposed for the generation of deep diamonds (Bulanova et al., 2010).
View in article
The nature of deep diamond inclusions also points to the presence of Ca-rich protoliths or calcic melts at depths exceeding 300-350 km (Korsakov and Hermann, 2006; Bulanova et al., 2010).
View in article
Dobson, D.P., Jones, A.P., Rabe, R., Sekine, T., Kurita, K., Taniguchi, T., Kondo, T., Kato, T., Shimomura, O., Urakawa, S. (1996) In-situ measurement of viscosity and density of carbonate melts at high pressure. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 143, 207-215.
Show in context
In situ high P density measurements are restricted to two P points for molten K2Ca(CO3)2 (2.75 g∙cm-3 at 2.5 GPa-950 ℃, 2.58 g∙cm-3 at 2.5 GPa-1150 ℃, and 2.80 g∙cm-3 at 4 GPa-1050 ℃) using the falling sphere technique (Dobson et al., 1996).
View in article
These first in situ density measurements were complemented by a study of the viscosity of K2Ca(CO3)2 and K2Mg(CO3)2 melts up to 5.5 GPa (Dobson et al., 1996).
View in article
Figure 2 Density of molten CaCO3 from experiments (circles: this work, squares: Dobson et al., 1996) and theoretical calculations (Genge et al., 1995; Vuilleumier et al., 2014; Li et al., 2017), compared to the seismological PREM model (Dziewonski and Anderson, 1981), crystalline calcite V (Li et al., 2017), molten hydrous and dry rhyolite (Malfait et al., 2014), molten hydrous and dry basalt (Sakamaki et al., 2006).
View in article
Dziewonski, A.M., Anderson, D.L. (1981) Preliminary reference Earth model. Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 25, 297-356.
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Figure 2 Density of molten CaCO3 from experiments (circles: this work, squares: Dobson et al., 1996) and theoretical calculations (Genge et al., 1995; Vuilleumier et al., 2014; Li et al., 2017), compared to the seismological PREM model (Dziewonski and Anderson, 1981), crystalline calcite V (Li et al., 2017), molten hydrous and dry rhyolite (Malfait et al., 2014), molten hydrous and dry basalt (Sakamaki et al., 2006).
View in article
Egelstaff, P.A. (1994) An Introduction to the Liquid State. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
Show in context
An alternative method to assess KT (Egelstaff, 1994) is by extrapolating S(q) to q = 0 Å-1 (Fig. S-2 and SI) as , where kB is Boltzmann’s constant.
View in article
Foley, S.F. (2008) Rejuvenation and erosion of the cratonic lithosphere. Nature Geoscience 1, 503-510.
Show in context
As such, the properties of carbonate melts are key in processes ranging from incipient melting at the oceanic lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary and lubrication of tectonic plates (Gaillard et al., 2008), to pervasive metasomatism of the continental lithospheric roots (Foley, 2008).
View in article
Gaillard, F., Malki, M., Iacono-Marziano, G., Pichavant, M., Scaillet, B. (2008) Carbonatite melts and electrical conductivity in the asthenosphere. Science 322, 1363-1365.
Show in context
As such, the properties of carbonate melts are key in processes ranging from incipient melting at the oceanic lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary and lubrication of tectonic plates (Gaillard et al., 2008), to pervasive metasomatism of the continental lithospheric roots (Foley, 2008).
View in article
Genge, M.J., Price, G.D., Jones, A.P. (1995) Molecular dynamics simulations of CaCO3 melts to mantle pressures and temperatures: implications for carbonatite magmas. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 131, 225-238.
Show in context
The calculated density values are consistent with MD simulations by Genge et al. (1995), although the mismatch with more recent simulations (Vuilleumier et al., 2014) is larger, but seems to be in agreement with ab initio calculations from Li et al. (2017).
View in article
Resulting KT values are provided on Figure 3, along with a correction of the two lowest P points to the 2073 K isotherm using dKT/dT = 0.02 K-1 from Genge et al. (1995).
View in article
Figure 2 Density of molten CaCO3 from experiments (circles: this work, squares: Dobson et al., 1996) and theoretical calculations (Genge et al., 1995; Vuilleumier et al., 2014; Li et al., 2017), compared to the seismological PREM model (Dziewonski and Anderson, 1981), crystalline calcite V (Li et al., 2017), molten hydrous and dry rhyolite (Malfait et al., 2014), molten hydrous and dry basalt (Sakamaki et al., 2006).
View in article
Goncharov, A.F., Sanloup, C., Goldman, N., Crowhurst, J.C., Bastea, S., Howard, W.M., Fried, L. E., Guignot, N., Mezouar, M., Meng, Y. (2009) Dissociative melting of ice VII at high pressure. Journal of Chemical Physics 130, 124514.
Show in context
Similarly, a strong increase of the melting enthalpy ΔH (i.e. TΔS) of water has been measured above 15 GPa and up to the ice VII-superionic ice X transition, associated with enhanced diffusion of H atoms in the liquid (Goncharov et al., 2009).
View in article
Hammouda, T., Keshav, S. (2015) Melting in the mantle in the presence of carbon: Review of experiments and discussion on the origin of carbonatites. Chemical Geology 418, 171-188.
Show in context
Deep carbonate melts cannot indeed derive from melting in the peridotite + CO2 system but from subducted carbonaceous sediments or from metasomatised eclogites (Hammouda and Keshav, 2015), keeping in mind that carbonatitic melts produced above 15 GPa get Mg-enriched while Ca-rich melts (Ca# = 0.68-0.70) are reported in the 8-14 GPa range (Thomson et al., 2016), coincidental to the negative CaCO3 melting slope.
View in article
Ishizawa, N., Setoguchi, H., Yanagisawa, K. (2013) Structural evolution of calcite at high temperatures: Phase V unveiled. Scientific Reports 3, 2832.
Show in context
Calcite V has a very peculiar molecular structure, with the oxygen sublattice being molten and the oxygen atoms diffusing along an undulated circular orbit (Ishizawa et al., 2013).
View in article
Jones, A.G., Genge, M., Carmody, L. (2013) Carbonate melts and carbonatites. Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry 75, 289-322.
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The geological importance of carbonate melts is linked to their low melting points compared to silicates, and hence their key role in triggering melting at depth (Jones et al., 2013).
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Kohara, S., Badyal, Y.S., Kouray, N., Idemotoy, Y., Takahashi, S., Curtiss, L.A., Saboungi, M.-L. (1998) The structure of molten alkali carbonates studied by neutron diffraction and ab initio calculations. Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter 10, 3301-3308.
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Structural data at ambient P have been collected on Li2CO3, K2CO3, LiKCO3 melts using neutron diffraction (Kohara et al., 1998), and Na2CO3 using X-ray diffraction (Wilding et al., 2016).
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Kono, Y., Sanloup, C. (2018) Magmas under Pressure: Advances in High-Pressure Experiments on Structure and Properties of Melts. Elsevier, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
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This contrasts with the advances in knowledge on silicate melts under P over the last decade, as reviewed in Kono and Sanloup (2018), and is due to the extreme difficulty in confining such low-viscosity melts for long durations.
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Kono, Y., Park, C., Kenney-Benson, C., Shen, G., Wang, Y. (2014) Toward comprehensive studies of liquids at high pressures and high temperatures: Combined structure, elastic wave velocity, and viscosity measurements in the Paris-Edinburgh cell. Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 228, 269-280.
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The ultralow viscosity, i.e. two orders of magnitude lower than for molten basalt at 1900 K, was nonetheless confirmed for calcite and dolomite melts (Kono et al., 2014), with no P effect observed up to 6.2 GPa.
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It appears this does not affect the viscosity of the melt vs. P (Kono et al., 2014), as the latter is controlled by the diffusivity of the cations.
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Korsakov, A.K., Hermann, J. (2006) Silicate and carbonate melt inclusions associated with diamonds in deeply subducted carbonate rocks. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 241, 104-118.
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The nature of deep diamond inclusions also points to the presence of Ca-rich protoliths or calcic melts at depths exceeding 300-350 km (Korsakov and Hermann, 2006; Bulanova et al., 2010).
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Li, Z., Li, J., Lange, R., Liu, J., Militzer, B. (2017) Determination of calcium carbonate and sodium carbonate melting curves up to Earth’s transition zone pressures with implications for the deep carbon cycle. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 457, 395-402.
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These are the first direct density measurements of compressed CaCO3 melt; they agree well with recent ab initio predictions (Li et al., 2017), which implies that the reported flattening of the melting curve followed by a slightly negative curve above 8 GPa cannot be due to crystal-melt density inversion.
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Of particular interest is the report of a flattening of the CaCO3 melting curve at 8 GPa followed by a slightly negative slope up to the calcite-aragonite-melt triple point at 13 GPa (Li et al., 2017).
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This evolution is unique amongst carbonates, with stronger and positive slopes reported for Na2CO3 and MgCO3 (Li et al., 2017).
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The calculated density values are consistent with MD simulations by Genge et al. (1995), although the mismatch with more recent simulations (Vuilleumier et al., 2014) is larger, but seems to be in agreement with ab initio calculations from Li et al. (2017).
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Figure 2 Density of molten CaCO3 from experiments (circles: this work, squares: Dobson et al., 1996) and theoretical calculations (Genge et al., 1995; Vuilleumier et al., 2014; Li et al., 2017), compared to the seismological PREM model (Dziewonski and Anderson, 1981), crystalline calcite V (Li et al., 2017), molten hydrous and dry rhyolite (Malfait et al., 2014), molten hydrous and dry basalt (Sakamaki et al., 2006).
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Our results confirm the liquid density of CaCO3 estimated from ab initio calculations (Li et al., 2017).
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There is no experimental data on the thermal equation of state of calcite V due to its very limited T-stability field (<200 K) and strong recrystallisation processes at high T (Suito et al., 2001), but the good agreement between experimental and theoretical estimates of liquid density lends support to theoretical calcite V equation of state (Li et al., 2017).
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Density crossover between solid and liquid phases may hence only occur at 17 GPa as predicted (Li et al., 2017).
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Litasov, K.D., Shatskiy, A., Gavryushkin, P.N., Bekhtenova, A.E., Dorogokupets, P.I., Danilov, B.S., Higo, Y., Akilbekov, A.T., Inerbaev, T.M. (2017) P-V-T equation of state of CaCO3 aragonite to 29 GPa and 1673 K: In situ X-ray diffraction study. Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors 2654, 82-91.
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At 8.7 GPa, the bulk modulus (80.6 ± 3.5 GPa) is identical to that of crystalline aragonite (79.5-81.3 GPa) using KT,0, K’ and dKT/dT values provided in Litasov et al. (2017), and although no high T data are available for calcite V, KT,0, K’ for aragonite is similar to that of calcite I (Redfern and Angel, 1999).
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Liu, Q., Lange, R.A. (2003) New density measurements on carbonate liquids and the partial molar volume of the CaCO3 component. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 146, 370-381.
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The effect of P on melt compaction, i.e. the bulk modulus, has been assessed for alkali carbonate melts by combining ambient P density and acoustic velocity measurements (Liu and Lange, 2003), and from the melting curve for K2CO3 (Liu et al., 2007).
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Liu, Q., Tenner, T.J., Lange, R.A. (2007) Do carbonate liquids become denser than silicate liquids at pressure? Constraints from the fusion curve of K2CO3 to 3.2 GPa. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 153, 55-66.
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The effect of P on melt compaction, i.e. the bulk modulus, has been assessed for alkali carbonate melts by combining ambient P density and acoustic velocity measurements (Liu and Lange, 2003), and from the melting curve for K2CO3 (Liu et al., 2007).
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Malfait, W.J., Seifert, R., Petitgirard, S., Perrillat, J.-P., Mezouar, M., Ota, T., Nakamura, E., Lerch, P., Sanchez-Valle, C. (2014) Supervolcano eruptions driven by melt buoyancy in large silicic magma chambers. Nature Geoscience 7, 122-125.
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Compared to silicate melts (Fig. 2), molten CaCO3 is less compressible than basalt (Sakamaki et al., 2006) especially at high P, but is only approximately 5 % less dense than hydrous rhyolite (Malfait et al., 2014), with a similar P-evolution (although the latter has only been investigated up to 4 GPa).
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Figure 2 Density of molten CaCO3 from experiments (circles: this work, squares: Dobson et al., 1996) and theoretical calculations (Genge et al., 1995; Vuilleumier et al., 2014; Li et al., 2017), compared to the seismological PREM model (Dziewonski and Anderson, 1981), crystalline calcite V (Li et al., 2017), molten hydrous and dry rhyolite (Malfait et al., 2014), molten hydrous and dry basalt (Sakamaki et al., 2006).
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Oganov, A.R., Ono, S., Ma, Y., Glass, C.W., Garcia, A. (2008) Novel high pressure structures of MgCO3, CaCO3 and CO2 and their role in Earth’s lower mantle. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 273, 38-47.
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C is coordinated by three O in the studied P-T range, but C becomes tetrahedrally coordinated above 50 GPa in crystalline MgCO3 (Oganov et al., 2008) and above 76 GPa in crystalline CaCO3 (Pickard and Needs, 2015).
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Pickard, C.J., Needs, R.J. (2015) Structures and stability of calcium and magnesium carbonates at mantle pressures. Physical Review B 91, 104101.
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C is coordinated by three O in the studied P-T range, but C becomes tetrahedrally coordinated above 50 GPa in crystalline MgCO3 (Oganov et al., 2008) and above 76 GPa in crystalline CaCO3 (Pickard and Needs, 2015).
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Redfern, S.A.T., Angel, R.J. (1999) High-pressure behaviour and equation of state of calcite, CaCO3. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 134, 102-106.
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At 8.7 GPa, the bulk modulus (80.6 ± 3.5 GPa) is identical to that of crystalline aragonite (79.5-81.3 GPa) using KT,0, K’ and dKT/dT values provided in Litasov et al. (2017), and although no high T data are available for calcite V, KT,0, K’ for aragonite is similar to that of calcite I (Redfern and Angel, 1999).
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Sakamaki, T., Suzuki, A., Ohtani, E. (2006) Stability of hydrous melt at the base of the Earth’s upper mantle. Nature 439, 192-194.
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Compared to silicate melts (Fig. 2), molten CaCO3 is less compressible than basalt (Sakamaki et al., 2006) especially at high P, but is only approximately 5 % less dense than hydrous rhyolite (Malfait et al., 2014), with a similar P-evolution (although the latter has only been investigated up to 4 GPa).
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Figure 2 Density of molten CaCO3 from experiments (circles: this work, squares: Dobson et al., 1996) and theoretical calculations (Genge et al., 1995; Vuilleumier et al., 2014; Li et al., 2017), compared to the seismological PREM model (Dziewonski and Anderson, 1981), crystalline calcite V (Li et al., 2017), molten hydrous and dry rhyolite (Malfait et al., 2014), molten hydrous and dry basalt (Sakamaki et al., 2006).
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Sanloup, C., Drewitt, J.W.E., Cr´episson, C., Kono, Y., Park, C., McCammon, C., Hennet, L., Brassamin, S., Bytchkov, A. (2013) Structure and density of molten fayalite at high pressure. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 118, 118-128.
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This method has been previously benchmarked for molten fayalite using the same experimental set up (Sanloup et al., 2013).
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Suito, K., Namba, J., Horikawa, T., Taniguchi, Y., Sakurai, N., Kobayashi, M., Onodera, A., Shimomura, O., Kikegawa, T. (2001) Phase relations of CaCO3 at high pressure and high temperature. American Mineralogist 86, 997-1002.
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There is no experimental data on the thermal equation of state of calcite V due to its very limited T-stability field (<200 K) and strong recrystallisation processes at high T (Suito et al., 2001), but the good agreement between experimental and theoretical estimates of liquid density lends support to theoretical calcite V equation of state (Li et al., 2017).
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Thomson, A.R., Walter, M.J., Kohn, S.C., Brooker, R.A. (2016) Slab melting as a barrier to deep carbon subduction. Nature 529, 76-79.
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Deep carbonate melts cannot indeed derive from melting in the peridotite + CO2 system but from subducted carbonaceous sediments or from metasomatised eclogites (Hammouda and Keshav, 2015), keeping in mind that carbonatitic melts produced above 15 GPa get Mg-enriched while Ca-rich melts (Ca# = 0.68-0.70) are reported in the 8-14 GPa range (Thomson et al., 2016), coincidental to the negative CaCO3 melting slope.
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Vuilleumier, R., Seitsonen, A., Sator, N., Guillot, B. (2014) Structure, equation of state and transport properties of molten calcium carbonate (CaCO3) by atomistic simulations. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 141, 547-566.
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These observations are consistent with the shrinkage of interatomic distance, most pronounced for Ca-Ca (from 4 Å at ambient P), and increase in intensity predicted for both contributions by molecular dynamics (MD) calculations (Vuilleumier et al., 2014), as a result of intermolecular packing upon compression.
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However, correspondence between Vuilleumier et al. (2014) MD simulations and our results supports their conclusions, i.e. the P-evolution of the liquid structure smoothes out the abrupt changes occurring across the underlying crystalline calcite V-aragonite transition.
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Figure 1 [...] (b) Corresponding radial distribution functions (plain curves), g(r), compared to MD simulations (dashed curve; Vuilleumier et al., 2014).
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The calculated density values are consistent with MD simulations by Genge et al. (1995), although the mismatch with more recent simulations (Vuilleumier et al., 2014) is larger, but seems to be in agreement with ab initio calculations from Li et al. (2017).
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Figure 2 Density of molten CaCO3 from experiments (circles: this work, squares: Dobson et al., 1996) and theoretical calculations (Genge et al., 1995; Vuilleumier et al., 2014; Li et al., 2017), compared to the seismological PREM model (Dziewonski and Anderson, 1981), crystalline calcite V (Li et al., 2017), molten hydrous and dry rhyolite (Malfait et al., 2014), molten hydrous and dry basalt (Sakamaki et al., 2006).
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Wilding, M.C., Wilson, M., Alderman, O.L.G., Benmore, C., Weber, J.K.R., Parise, J.B., Tamalonis, A., Skinner, L. (2016) Low-dimensional network formation in molten sodium carbonate. Scientific Reports 6, 24415.
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Structural data at ambient P have been collected on Li2CO3, K2CO3, LiKCO3 melts using neutron diffraction (Kohara et al., 1998), and Na2CO3 using X-ray diffraction (Wilding et al., 2016).
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Supplementary Information
The Supplementary Information includes:
- Material and Methods
- Table S-1
- Figures S-1 and S-2
- Supplementary Information References
Download the Supplementary Information (PDF).