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High Temperature Evaporation and Isotopic Fractionation of K and Cu

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Abstract The chemical and isotopic signatures of moderately volatile elements are useful for understanding processes of volatile depletion in planetary formation and differentiation. However, the fractionation factors between gas and… Click to show full abstract

Abstract The chemical and isotopic signatures of moderately volatile elements are useful for understanding processes of volatile depletion in planetary formation and differentiation. However, the fractionation factors between gas and melt phases during evaporation that are required to model these planetary volatile depletion processes are still sparse. In this study, twenty heating experiments were conducted in 1 atm gas-mixing furnaces to constrain the behavior of K, Cu, and Zn evaporation and isotopic fractionation from basaltic melts at high temperatures. The temperatures range from 1300 °C to 1400 °C, and durations are from 2 to 8 days. Oxygen fugacities (fO2) range from one log unit below to ten log units above that of the iron-wustite buffer (IW–1 to IW+10, corresponding to logfO2 of –10.7 to –0.68 at 1400 °C). The conditions were selected to achieve an evaporation-dominated regime (where timescales of diffusion R R 0 = f α - 1 ), for K and Cu remain constant, thus these factors can be applied to a wider range of conditions than those in this study. The experimentally determined fractionation factors for K, and Cu during evaporation from basaltic melts are 0.9944, and 0.9961, respectively. The fractionation factors for these elements with varying volatilities are all significantly larger than the “apparent observed fractionation factors,” which approach one and are inferred from lunar basalts relative to the Bulk Silicate Earth. This observation suggests near-equilibrium conditions during volatile-element loss from the Moon as the “apparent observed fractionation factors” of lunar basalts are similar for all three elements.

Keywords: fractionation; evaporation; evaporation isotopic; isotopic fractionation; fractionation factors

Journal Title: Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
Year Published: 2021

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