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Experimental petrochemistry of some highly siderophile elements at high temperatures, and some implications for core formation and the mantle''s early history
Authors:H. St. C. O''Neill   D. B. Dingwell   A. Borisov   B. Spettel  H. Palme
Affiliation:

a Bayerisches Geoinstitut, Universität Bayreuth, D-95440, Bayreuth, Germany

b Max-Planck-Institut für Chemie, Saarstraße 23, D-55122, Mainz, Germany

Abstract:The highly siderophile elements (HSE's: Ru, Rh, Pd, Re, Os, Ir, Pt and Au) and those elements with distribution coefficients between Fe-rich metal and silicate phases which exceed 104. The large magnitude of these distribution coefficients makes them exceedingly difficult to measure experimentally. We describe a new experimental campaign aimed at obtaining reliable values of DMmets/sil melt for selected HSE's indirectly, by measuring the solubilities of the pure metals (or simple HSE alloys) in haplobasaltic melts as a function of oxygen fugacity.

Preliminary results for Pd, Au, Ir and Re indicate that the HSE's may dissolve in silicate melts in unusually low valence states, e.g., 2+ for Ir and 1+ for the others. These unusual valence states may be important in understanding the geochemical properties of the HSE's. Inferred values of DMmet/sil melt from the solubility data at 1400°C and IW −1 are 107 for Pd and Au, and 109−1012 for Ir. Metal/silicate partition coefficients are thus confirmed to be very large, and are also different for the different HSE's.

A review of the abundance of the HSE's in the Earth's upper mantle shows that they are all present at 0.8% of chondritic, i.e. they have the same relative abundance, and the ratios of their concentrations are chondritic (e.g., Re/Os). Both the low degree of depletion (compared to the high values of DMmet/sil melt) and the chondritic relative abundances support the idea that the mantle's HSE's were added in a “late veneer” after the cessation of core formation. Sulfur is even more depleted in the mantle relative to CI chondrites than the HSE's: this implies a late veneer which was depleted in volatile elements, and which was added to a mantle stripped of S. Since considerable S dissolves in silicate melt, this further implies that core formation in the Earth either occurred under P−T conditions below the solicate solidus, or, if the process occurred over a range of temperatures in a cooling Earth, then the process continued down to conditions below the silicate solidus.

The chondritic relative abundances of the HSE's in the upper mantle argue for a chemically unstratified primitive mantle, unless the late veneer was mixed only into the upper mantle.

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