TY - JOUR
T1 - The effect of CO2 on the speciation of RbBr in solution at temperatures to 579 °C and pressures to 0.26 GPa
AU - Evans, K. A.
AU - Gordon, R. A.
AU - Mavrogenes, J. A.
AU - Tailby, N.
PY - 2009/5/1
Y1 - 2009/5/1
N2 - Carbon dioxide- and salt-bearing solutions are common in granulite, ore-forming and magmatic environments. The presence of CO2 affects mineral solubilities, fluid miscibility, and viscosity and wetting properties, and is expected to affect salt speciation. EXAFS measurements of RbBr-H2O-CO2 fluids contained in corundum-osed synthetic fluid inclusions (SFLINCs) have been used to investigate the effect of CO2 on salt speciation at temperatures to 579 °C and pressures to around 0.26 GPa. Forward modelling indicates that solute dehydration is difficult to distinguish from up to around 40% of Rb-Br ion-pairing, so results refer to the total number of nearest neighbours, which are likely to be mostly O present in waters of hydration, but may also include Br, if ion pairing is present. Additionally, results relate to the number of well-ordered neighbours in the first shell, because nearest neighbours with a high degree of disorder may be present but contribute minimally to the EXAFS signal. Analysis of the EXAFS results at the Rb edge for the CO2-free solution is consistent with previous work and shows that the number of nearest neighbours for Rb in CO2-free solutions decreases from 6 ± 0.6 to 1.4 ± 0.1 as temperature increases from 20 to 534 °C. The decrease is accompanied by a decrease in Rb-x bondlengths of 0.05 Å, where x is the first shell scatterer. Results for the CO2-bearing solution are different to those for the CO2-free solution. The number of nearest neighbours is 16 and 22% less than for the CO2-bearing solution at 312 and 445 °C respectively. Changes in the numbers of nearest neighbours correlate well with calculated changes in the bulk solution dielectric constant; CO2-bearing and CO2-free solutions lie on the same trend, which suggests that it may be possible to calculate the number of nearest neighbours from dielectric constant. Rb-x bondlengths for the CO2-bearing solution are statistically indistinguishable to those for the CO2-free inclusions. Results for Br are worse quality than for Rb so EXAFS analysis could not be completed, however XANES spectra for CO2-free and CO2-bearing solutions are consistent with solute dehydration similar to that recorded by the Rb spectra. The conclusions of this study provide support for the notion that CO2 has a fundamental effect on the mechanics of solubility, and that these effects should be incorporated into conceptual and quantitative thermodynamic models.
AB - Carbon dioxide- and salt-bearing solutions are common in granulite, ore-forming and magmatic environments. The presence of CO2 affects mineral solubilities, fluid miscibility, and viscosity and wetting properties, and is expected to affect salt speciation. EXAFS measurements of RbBr-H2O-CO2 fluids contained in corundum-osed synthetic fluid inclusions (SFLINCs) have been used to investigate the effect of CO2 on salt speciation at temperatures to 579 °C and pressures to around 0.26 GPa. Forward modelling indicates that solute dehydration is difficult to distinguish from up to around 40% of Rb-Br ion-pairing, so results refer to the total number of nearest neighbours, which are likely to be mostly O present in waters of hydration, but may also include Br, if ion pairing is present. Additionally, results relate to the number of well-ordered neighbours in the first shell, because nearest neighbours with a high degree of disorder may be present but contribute minimally to the EXAFS signal. Analysis of the EXAFS results at the Rb edge for the CO2-free solution is consistent with previous work and shows that the number of nearest neighbours for Rb in CO2-free solutions decreases from 6 ± 0.6 to 1.4 ± 0.1 as temperature increases from 20 to 534 °C. The decrease is accompanied by a decrease in Rb-x bondlengths of 0.05 Å, where x is the first shell scatterer. Results for the CO2-bearing solution are different to those for the CO2-free solution. The number of nearest neighbours is 16 and 22% less than for the CO2-bearing solution at 312 and 445 °C respectively. Changes in the numbers of nearest neighbours correlate well with calculated changes in the bulk solution dielectric constant; CO2-bearing and CO2-free solutions lie on the same trend, which suggests that it may be possible to calculate the number of nearest neighbours from dielectric constant. Rb-x bondlengths for the CO2-bearing solution are statistically indistinguishable to those for the CO2-free inclusions. Results for Br are worse quality than for Rb so EXAFS analysis could not be completed, however XANES spectra for CO2-free and CO2-bearing solutions are consistent with solute dehydration similar to that recorded by the Rb spectra. The conclusions of this study provide support for the notion that CO2 has a fundamental effect on the mechanics of solubility, and that these effects should be incorporated into conceptual and quantitative thermodynamic models.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=63449140882&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.gca.2009.02.011
DO - 10.1016/j.gca.2009.02.011
M3 - Article
SN - 0016-7037
VL - 73
SP - 2631
EP - 2644
JO - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
JF - Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
IS - 9
ER -