Point defect chemistry of minerals under a hydrothermal environment
- 10 June 1984
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research
- Vol. 89 (B6) , 4026-4038
- https://doi.org/10.1029/jb089ib06p04026
Abstract
The kinetics of rock/water interactions are sufficiently rapid that most hydrothermal systems in nature will be in equilibrium with the adjacent rock mass. The bulk rock chemistry buffers the fugacity of oxygen, which in turn fixes the fugacities of water and of hydrogen for a given pressure and temperature. Systems in which only water, oxygen, and hydrogen are present as fluid phases are considered here. Variations in the fugacity of oxygen by several orders of magnitude are possible locally, controlled by variations in local rock chemistry; these lead to relative small variations in the fugacity of water. Incorporation of a hydrogen defect that is capable of acting as an acceptor into silicates leads to a strong dependence of point defect chemistry upon the fugacities of both water and oxygen. The strong dependence on the fugacity of water is capable of explaining the hydrolytic weakening effect, but in view of the strong dependence on oxygen fugacity, the question should also be raised whether it is an oxygen effect that is observed in the classical hydrolytic weakening process or solely a dependence on changes in the fugacity of water. Examples are given for impure natural quartz, olivine, and albite with trace amounts of calcium.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Constraints on the mechanism of deformation of olivine imposed by defect chemistryTectonophysics, 1983
- Hydrogen donors in α-Al2O3Journal of Applied Physics, 1982
- The influence of metamorphic environment upon the deformation of mineralsTectonophysics, 1981
- Water diffusion in quartz at high pressure: Tectonic implicationsGeophysical Research Letters, 1981
- Oxygen self-diffusion in forsterite: Implications for the high-temperature creep mechanismEarth and Planetary Science Letters, 1980
- Electrical properties of forsterite,Mg2SiO4. IIPhysical Review B, 1979
- Hydrolytic weakening in quartzTectonophysics, 1978
- Effect of enstatite activity and oxygen partial pressure on the point-defect chemistry of olivinePhysics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors, 1978
- Incorporation and mobility of OH- ions in LiNbO3 crystalsPhysica Status Solidi (a), 1977
- Electronic structure, spectra, and properties of 4:2-coordinated materials. I. Crystalline and amorphousandPhysical Review B, 1976