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Journal ArticleDOI

Diffusion of hydrogen in olivine: Implications for water in the mantle

TLDR
In this article, single crystals from San Carlos in Arizona have been annealed at temperatures between 800° and 1000°C under hydrothermal conditions at a confining pressure of 300 MPa.
Abstract
To investigate the kinetics of diffusion of hydrogen in olivine, single crystals from San Carlos in Arizona have been annealed at temperatures between 800° and 1000°C under hydrothermal conditions at a confining pressure of 300 MPa. The hydrogen diffusivities were determined for the [100], [010], and [001] directions from concentration profiles for hydroxyl in the samples. These profiles were obtained from infrared spectra taken at 100-μm intervals across a thin slice which was cut from the central portion of each annealed crystal. The rate of diffusion is anisotropic, with fastest transport along the [100] axis and slowest along the [010] axis. The fit of the data to an Arrhenius law for diffusion parallel to [100] yields an activation enthalpy of 130±30 kJ/mol with a preexponential term of (6±3)×10−5 m2 s−1. For diffusion parallel to [001], as there are insufficient data to calculate the activation enthalpy for diffusion, we used the same value as that for diffusion parallel to [100] and determined a preexponential term of (5±4)×10−6 m2 s−1. The diffusion rate parallel to [010] is about 1 order of magnitude slower than along [001]. The measured diffusivities are large enough that the hydrogen content of olivine grains which are millimeters in diameter will adjust to changing environmental conditions in time scales of hours at temperatures as low as 800°C. As xenoliths ascending from the mantle remain at high temperatures (i.e., >1000°C) but experience a rapid decrease in pressure, and hence hydrogen fugacity, olivine grains may dehydrate during ascent. By comparison, slow rates of carbon diffusion (Tingle et al., 1988) suggest that carbon will not be lost from olivine during ascent. Thus, low hydrogen contents within olivine and within fluid inclusions in olivine cannot be taken as support for low water contents in the mantle.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Water in the oceanic upper mantle: implications for rheology, melt extraction and the evolution of the lithosphere

TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of water on the dynamics of the oceanic upper mantle is re-evaluated based on recent experimental constraints on the solubility of water in mantle minerals and earlier experimental studies of olivine rheology.
Journal ArticleDOI

Water in Earth's Mantle: The Role of Nominally Anhydrous Minerals

TL;DR: Nominally anhydrous minerals constitute a significant reservoir for mantle hydrogen, possibly accommodating all water in the depleted mantle and providing a possible mechanism to recycle water from Earth's surface into the deep mantle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of water on plastic deformation of olivine aggregates 2. Dislocation creep regime

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the effect of water fugacity on the creep behavior of olivine aggregates in the dislocation creep regime and concluded that water influences creep rate primarily through its effect on the concentrations of intrinsic point defects and hence on ionic diffusion and dislocation climb.
Journal ArticleDOI

Whole-mantle convection and the transition-zone water filter

TL;DR: It is proposed that the transition-zone water-filter model can explain many geochemical observations while avoiding the major pitfalls of invoking isolated mantle reservoirs.
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Principles of igneous and metamorphic petrology

TL;DR: The authors provides a basic understanding of the formative processes of igneous and metamorphic rock through quantitative applications of simple physical and chemical principles, and encourages a deeper comprehension of the subject by explaining the petrologic principles.
References
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Book

Conduction of Heat in Solids

TL;DR: In this paper, a classic account describes the known exact solutions of problems of heat flow, with detailed discussion of all the most important boundary value problems, including boundary value maximization.
ReportDOI

Thermodynamic Properties of Minerals and Related Substances at 298.15 K and 1 Bar (105 Pascals) Pressure and at Higher Temperatures

TL;DR: A report about values for the entropy, molar volume, and for the enthalpy and Gibbs energy of formation for the elements and minerals and substances at 298.15 K was given in this paper.
Book

Diffusion in solids

Journal ArticleDOI

Rheology of synthetic olivine aggregates: Influence of grain size and water

TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of grain size and water content on the high-temperature plasticity of olivine aggregates was studied, using a gas medium high-pressure deformation apparatus.
Journal ArticleDOI

The determination of hydroxyl by infrared absorption in quartz, silicate glasses and similar materials

TL;DR: In this article, a relation between the coefficient d'absorption molaire integral integral (I/γ) and I/γ = 150(3 780 v) is presented.
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