Kinetic analysis of dehydration/dehydroxylation from carbonaceous chondrites by in situ heating experiments under an infrared microscope

Author:

Zheng Mengyan1,Kebukawa Yoko12ORCID,Hayashi Yuka1,Kobayashi Kensei1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry and Life Science Yokohama National University 79‐5 Tokiwadai Hodogaya‐ku 240‐8501 Yokohama Japan

2. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences Tokyo Institute of Technology 2‐12‐1 Ookayama Meguro‐ku 152‐8551 Tokyo Japan

Abstract

AbstractCI, CM, and CR carbonaceous chondrites contain hydrous minerals, indicating that their parent bodies underwent aqueous alteration at low temperatures. Some of these chondrites, such as heated CM, CI, and CY chondrites, experienced thermal dehydration by impacts or solar radiation after aqueous alteration. This study conducted heating experiments on carbonaceous chondrites and evaluated their dehydration/dehydroxylation kinetics in an effort to explain the thermal history of the parent asteroids of heated carbonaceous chondrites using their degrees of dehydration/dehydroxylation of hydrous minerals. Murchison (CM2.5) and Ivuna (CI1), relatively primitive (having not undergone thermal alteration) carbonaceous chondrites, were used as starting materials. Weakening in the OH band at ~3680 cm−1 (2.72 μm) with isothermal heating at 350–500°C (Murchison) and 450–525°C (Ivuna) were observed under in situ infrared spectroscopy (FT‐IR) equipped with a heating stage. To determine the rate constants, the decrease in the OH band was fitted using kinetic models such as first‐order reactions, two‐dimensional diffusion, and three‐dimensional diffusion. The apparent activation energies and frequency factors were determined using the Arrhenius equation. Time–temperature transformation diagrams were drawn to represent the decrease in the OH‐band intensity as a function of temperature and heating duration. Such kinetic approaches can provide constraints on the temperature and time of the dehydration/dehydroxylation processes and enable us to estimate long‐term effects from experiments in the laboratory within a short time.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Publisher

Wiley

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