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Nanoscale chemical characterisation of phase separation,solid state transformation,and recrystallization in feldspar and maskelynite using atom probe tomography
Authors:Email authorEmail author  T?V?Kizovski  K?T?Tait  B?Langelier  L?M?Gordon  D?Harlov  N?Norberg
Institution:1.Department of Natural History,Royal Ontario Museum,Toronto,Canada;2.Department of Earth Sciences,University of Toronto,Toronto,Canada;3.Canadian Centre for Electron Microscopy,McMaster University,Hamilton,Canada;4.Environmental Molecular Sciences Laboratory,Pacific Northwest National Laboratory,Richland,USA;5.GeoForschungsZentrum Potsdam Telegrafenberg,Potsdam,Germany;6.Department of Geology,University of Johannesburg,Auckland Park,South Africa
Abstract:The feldspar minerals occur in a wide variety of lithologies throughout the Solar System, often containing a variety of chemical and structural features indicative of the crystallization conditions, cooling history and deformational state of the crystal. Such phenomena are often poorly resolved in micrometre-scale analyses. Here, atom probe tomography (APT) is conducted on Ca-rich (bytownite) and Na-rich (albite) plagioclase reference materials, experimentally exsolved K-feldspar (sanidine), shock-induced plagioclase glass (labradorite-composition), and shocked and recrystallized plagioclase to directly test the application of APT to feldspar and yield new insights into crystallographic features such as amorphisation and exsolution. Undeformed plagioclase reference materials (Amelia albite and Stillwater bytownite) appear chemically homogenous, and yield compositions largely within uncertainty of published data. Within microstructurally complex materials, APT can resolve chemical variations across a ~?20 nm wide exsolution lamella and define major element (Na, K) diffusion profiles across the lamella boundaries, which appear gradational over a ~?10 nm length scale in experimentally exsolved K-feldspar NNPP-04b. The plagioclase glass within the Zagami shergottite shows no heterogeneity in the distribution of major elements, although the enrichment of Fe, Mg and Sr in the bulk microtip points to at least minor incorporation of surrounding phases (pyroxene), and with that supports a shock-melt origin for the glass (maskelynite). The recrystallization of feldspar during post-shock annealing, such as in poikilitic shergottite NWA 6342, appears to induce a range of chemical nanostructures that locally effect the composition of the material. These findings demonstrate the ability of APT to yield new insights into nanoscale composition and chemical structures of alumniosilicate phases, highlighting an exciting new avenue with which to analyse these key rock-forming minerals.
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