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Article Dans Une Revue Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America Année : 2011

New host for carbon in the deep Earth

Résumé

The global geochemical carbon cycle involves exchanges between the Earth's interior and the surface. Carbon is recycled into the mantle via subduction mainly as carbonates and is released to the atmosphere via volcanism mostly as CO2. The stability of carbonates versus decarbonation and melting is therefore of great interest for understanding the global carbon cycle. For all these reasons, the thermodynamic properties and phase diagrams of these minerals are needed up to core mantle boundary conditions. However, the nature of C-bearing minerals at these conditions remains unclear. Here we show the existence of a new Mg-Fe carbon-bearing compound at depths greater than 1,800 km. Its structure, based on three-membered rings of corner-sharing ðCO4Þ4− tetrahedra, is in close agreement with predictions by first principles quantum calculations [Oganov AR, et al. (2008) Novel high-pressure structures of MgCO3, CaCO3 and CO2 and their role in Earth's lower mantle. Earth Planet Sci Lett 273:38-47]. This high-pressure polymorph of carbonates concentrates a large amount of FeðIIIÞ as a result of intracrystalline reaction between FeðIIÞ and ðCO3Þ2− groups schematically written as 4FeO þ CO2 → 2Fe2O3 þ C. This results in an assemblage of the new high-pressure phase, magnetite and nanodiamonds.

Domaines

Minéralogie

Dates et versions

hal-00612899 , version 1 (01-08-2011)

Identifiants

Citer

Eglantine Boulard, Alexandre Gloter, Alexandre Corgne, Daniele Antonangeli, Anne-Line Auzende, et al.. New host for carbon in the deep Earth. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2011, 108 (13), pp.5184-5187. ⟨10.1073/pnas.1016934108⟩. ⟨hal-00612899⟩
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