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Melting of hydrous and hydrous-carbonated eclogite in the mantle

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Water is a key component at Earth’s surface controlling geomorphological processes and establishing an environment capable of supporting life, but it is also present in the mantle as point defects in the lattice of nominally anhydrous minerals (NAMs). Even in trace amounts (i.e., ppm wt), H2O exerts a profound influence on rock properties such as decreasing the melting temperature, which allows melting to occur at much greater depths with respect to volatile-free conditions, impacting the geochemical evolution of the deep mantle. Therefore, precisely modelling melting processes as a function of volatiles content is of great interest in petrology and requires a precise knowledge of the behavior of volatiles at mantle pressure and temperature.A fundamental parameter used to investigate hydrous melting is the partition coefficient of H2O (DH2Omin/melt = CH2Omin/CH2Omelt), which can be studied at high-pressure high-temperature by performing laboratory experiments. A large number of studies have previously determined the DH2Omin/melt for major mantle phases and mantle conditions in a hydrous system. However, a more comprehensive investigation of the distribution of H2O in the mantle requires also the consideration of CO2, which is the 2nd most abundant volatile in the mantle and is expected to alter the activity of H2O of the system and, consequently, the DH2Omin/melt. Notably, the effect of CO2 on DH2Omin/melt at mantle conditions remains largely unconstrained today.We present the results of a series of 2 GPa-1200°C piston cylinder experiments investigating an eclogitic system, where clinopyroxene (+garnet) crystals were equilibrated with melt. The experiments were conducted at hydrous and hydrous-carbonated conditions with different amounts of CO2. The experimental charges were recovered, and minerals and melts were investigated by electron microprobe analyses, to determine chemical composition and Fourier Transform Infra-Red and Raman spectroscopy to determine the H2O contents. The experiments highlight a strong effect of CO2 content on decreasing DH2Omin/melt. The new results are used to discuss melting processes interesting eclogitic lithologies in the deep mantle and at representative chemical compositions.
Title: Melting of hydrous and hydrous-carbonated eclogite in the mantle
Description:
Water is a key component at Earth’s surface controlling geomorphological processes and establishing an environment capable of supporting life, but it is also present in the mantle as point defects in the lattice of nominally anhydrous minerals (NAMs).
Even in trace amounts (i.
e.
, ppm wt), H2O exerts a profound influence on rock properties such as decreasing the melting temperature, which allows melting to occur at much greater depths with respect to volatile-free conditions, impacting the geochemical evolution of the deep mantle.
Therefore, precisely modelling melting processes as a function of volatiles content is of great interest in petrology and requires a precise knowledge of the behavior of volatiles at mantle pressure and temperature.
A fundamental parameter used to investigate hydrous melting is the partition coefficient of H2O (DH2Omin/melt = CH2Omin/CH2Omelt), which can be studied at high-pressure high-temperature by performing laboratory experiments.
A large number of studies have previously determined the DH2Omin/melt for major mantle phases and mantle conditions in a hydrous system.
However, a more comprehensive investigation of the distribution of H2O in the mantle requires also the consideration of CO2, which is the 2nd most abundant volatile in the mantle and is expected to alter the activity of H2O of the system and, consequently, the DH2Omin/melt.
Notably, the effect of CO2 on DH2Omin/melt at mantle conditions remains largely unconstrained today.
We present the results of a series of 2 GPa-1200°C piston cylinder experiments investigating an eclogitic system, where clinopyroxene (+garnet) crystals were equilibrated with melt.
The experiments were conducted at hydrous and hydrous-carbonated conditions with different amounts of CO2.
The experimental charges were recovered, and minerals and melts were investigated by electron microprobe analyses, to determine chemical composition and Fourier Transform Infra-Red and Raman spectroscopy to determine the H2O contents.
The experiments highlight a strong effect of CO2 content on decreasing DH2Omin/melt.
The new results are used to discuss melting processes interesting eclogitic lithologies in the deep mantle and at representative chemical compositions.

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