Phosphorus and aluminum zoning in olivine : contrasting behavior of two nominally incompatible trace elements

Phosphorus zoning in olivine is receiving considerable attention for its capacity to preserve key information about rates and mechanisms of crystal growth. Its concentration can vary significantly over sub-micron spatial scales and form intricate, snowflake-like patterns that are generally attribute...

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Main Authors: Shea, Thomas, Hammer, Julia E., Hellebrand, Eric, Mourey, Adrien J., Costa, Fidel, First, Emily C., Lynn, Kendra J., Melnik, Oleg
Other Authors: Asian School of the Environment
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146283
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
id sg-ntu-dr.10356-146283
record_format dspace
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Geology::Volcanoes and earthquakes
Olivine
Phosporous
spellingShingle Science::Geology::Volcanoes and earthquakes
Olivine
Phosporous
Shea, Thomas
Hammer, Julia E.
Hellebrand, Eric
Mourey, Adrien J.
Costa, Fidel
First, Emily C.
Lynn, Kendra J.
Melnik, Oleg
Phosphorus and aluminum zoning in olivine : contrasting behavior of two nominally incompatible trace elements
description Phosphorus zoning in olivine is receiving considerable attention for its capacity to preserve key information about rates and mechanisms of crystal growth. Its concentration can vary significantly over sub-micron spatial scales and form intricate, snowflake-like patterns that are generally attributed to fast crystal growth. Ostensibly similar aluminum enrichment patterns have also been observed, suggesting comparable incorporation and partitioning behavior for both elements. We perform 1-atm crystallization experiments on a primitive Kīlauea basalt to examine the formation of P and Al zoning as a function of undercooling − ΔT (− ΔT = Tliquidus − Tcrystallization) during olivine growth. After 24 h spent at Tinitial = 1290 °C (10 °C above olivine stability), charges are rapidly cooled to final temperatures Tfinal = 1220–1270 °C, corresponding to undercoolings − ΔT = 10–60 °C (with Tliquidus = 1280 °C). Compositional X-ray maps of experimental olivine reveal that only a small undercooling (≤ 25 °C) is required to produce the fine-scale enrichments in P and Al associated with skeletal growth. Concentration profiles indicate that despite qualitatively similar enrichment patterns in olivine, P and Al have contrasting apparent crystal/melt mass distribution coefficients of KPol/melt = 0.01‒1 and KPol/melt = 0.002‒0.006. Phosphorus can be enriched by a factor > 40-fold in the same crystal, whereas Al enrichment never exceed factors of 2. Glass in the vicinity of synthetic and natural olivine is usually enriched in Al, but, within analytical uncertainty, not in P. Thus, we find no direct evidence for a compositional boundary layer enriched in P that would suffice to produce P enrichments in natural and synthetic olivine. Numerical models combining growth and diffusion resolve the conditions at which Al-rich boundary layers produce the observed enrichment patterns in olivine. In contrast, the same models fail to reproduce the observed P enrichments, consistent with our observation that P-rich boundary layers are insignificant. If instead, P olivine/melt partitioning is made to depend on growth rate, models adequately reproduce our observations of 40-fold enrichment without boundary layer formation. We surmise that near-partitionless behavior (KPol/melt close to 1) of P is related to the olivine lattice being perhaps less stiff in accommodating P during rapid crystallization, and/or to enhanced formation of vacancy defects during fast growth. Our results confirm that P is a robust marker of initial rapid growth, but reveal that the undercooling necessary to induce these enrichments is not particularly large. The near-ubiquitous process of magma mixing under volcanoes, for instance, is likely sufficient to induce low-to-moderate degrees of undercooling required for skeletal growth.
author2 Asian School of the Environment
author_facet Asian School of the Environment
Shea, Thomas
Hammer, Julia E.
Hellebrand, Eric
Mourey, Adrien J.
Costa, Fidel
First, Emily C.
Lynn, Kendra J.
Melnik, Oleg
format Article
author Shea, Thomas
Hammer, Julia E.
Hellebrand, Eric
Mourey, Adrien J.
Costa, Fidel
First, Emily C.
Lynn, Kendra J.
Melnik, Oleg
author_sort Shea, Thomas
title Phosphorus and aluminum zoning in olivine : contrasting behavior of two nominally incompatible trace elements
title_short Phosphorus and aluminum zoning in olivine : contrasting behavior of two nominally incompatible trace elements
title_full Phosphorus and aluminum zoning in olivine : contrasting behavior of two nominally incompatible trace elements
title_fullStr Phosphorus and aluminum zoning in olivine : contrasting behavior of two nominally incompatible trace elements
title_full_unstemmed Phosphorus and aluminum zoning in olivine : contrasting behavior of two nominally incompatible trace elements
title_sort phosphorus and aluminum zoning in olivine : contrasting behavior of two nominally incompatible trace elements
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146283
_version_ 1759856612614340608
spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1462832023-02-28T16:41:35Z Phosphorus and aluminum zoning in olivine : contrasting behavior of two nominally incompatible trace elements Shea, Thomas Hammer, Julia E. Hellebrand, Eric Mourey, Adrien J. Costa, Fidel First, Emily C. Lynn, Kendra J. Melnik, Oleg Asian School of the Environment Science::Geology::Volcanoes and earthquakes Olivine Phosporous Phosphorus zoning in olivine is receiving considerable attention for its capacity to preserve key information about rates and mechanisms of crystal growth. Its concentration can vary significantly over sub-micron spatial scales and form intricate, snowflake-like patterns that are generally attributed to fast crystal growth. Ostensibly similar aluminum enrichment patterns have also been observed, suggesting comparable incorporation and partitioning behavior for both elements. We perform 1-atm crystallization experiments on a primitive Kīlauea basalt to examine the formation of P and Al zoning as a function of undercooling − ΔT (− ΔT = Tliquidus − Tcrystallization) during olivine growth. After 24 h spent at Tinitial = 1290 °C (10 °C above olivine stability), charges are rapidly cooled to final temperatures Tfinal = 1220–1270 °C, corresponding to undercoolings − ΔT = 10–60 °C (with Tliquidus = 1280 °C). Compositional X-ray maps of experimental olivine reveal that only a small undercooling (≤ 25 °C) is required to produce the fine-scale enrichments in P and Al associated with skeletal growth. Concentration profiles indicate that despite qualitatively similar enrichment patterns in olivine, P and Al have contrasting apparent crystal/melt mass distribution coefficients of KPol/melt = 0.01‒1 and KPol/melt = 0.002‒0.006. Phosphorus can be enriched by a factor > 40-fold in the same crystal, whereas Al enrichment never exceed factors of 2. Glass in the vicinity of synthetic and natural olivine is usually enriched in Al, but, within analytical uncertainty, not in P. Thus, we find no direct evidence for a compositional boundary layer enriched in P that would suffice to produce P enrichments in natural and synthetic olivine. Numerical models combining growth and diffusion resolve the conditions at which Al-rich boundary layers produce the observed enrichment patterns in olivine. In contrast, the same models fail to reproduce the observed P enrichments, consistent with our observation that P-rich boundary layers are insignificant. If instead, P olivine/melt partitioning is made to depend on growth rate, models adequately reproduce our observations of 40-fold enrichment without boundary layer formation. We surmise that near-partitionless behavior (KPol/melt close to 1) of P is related to the olivine lattice being perhaps less stiff in accommodating P during rapid crystallization, and/or to enhanced formation of vacancy defects during fast growth. Our results confirm that P is a robust marker of initial rapid growth, but reveal that the undercooling necessary to induce these enrichments is not particularly large. The near-ubiquitous process of magma mixing under volcanoes, for instance, is likely sufficient to induce low-to-moderate degrees of undercooling required for skeletal growth. National Research Foundation (NRF) Accepted version This work was funded by National Science Foun- dation Grant EAR-17225321 to TS and by a National Research Foundation Investigatorship Award (Grant number NRF-NRFI2017-06) to FC. The authors acknowledge Benoît Welsch, Francois Faure, Caroline Bouvet-de-Maisonneuve, and Mike Garcia, for the conversations that stimulated some of the ideas presented in this work. Reviews by Bruce Watson and Youxue Zhang helped improve the clarity of the manuscript. We also thank the editor Gordon Moore for his timely handling of the manuscript. This is SOEST contribution 10796. 2021-02-05T02:12:49Z 2021-02-05T02:12:49Z 2019 Journal Article Shea, T., Hammer, J. E., Hellebrand, E., Mourey, A. J., Costa, F., First, E. C., ... Melnik, O. (2019). Phosphorus and aluminum zoning in olivine : contrasting behavior of two nominally incompatible trace elements. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, 174(10). doi:10.1007/s00410-019-1618-y 0010-7999 0000-0001-7378-684X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146283 10.1007/s00410-019-1618-y 2-s2.0-85073192872 10 174 en National Research Foundation Investigatorship Award (Grant number NRF-NRFI2017-06) Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology © 2019 Springer. This is a post-peer-review, pre-copyedit version of an article published in Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology. The final authenticated version is available online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00410-019-1618-y application/pdf