Author:
Serovaiskii Aleksandr,Mukhina Elena,Dubrovinsky Leonid,Chernoutsan Aleksey,Kudryavtsev Daniil,McCammon Catherine,Aprilis Georgios,Kupenko Ilya,Chumakov Aleksandr,Hanfland Michael,Kutcherov Vladimir
Abstract
Subducted sediments play a key role in the evolution of the continental crust and upper mantle. As part of the deep carbon cycle, hydrocarbons are accumulated in sediments of subduction zones and could eventually be transported with the slab below the crust, thus affecting processes in the deep Earth’s interior. However, the behavior of hydrocarbons during subduction is poorly understood. We experimentally investigated the chemical interaction of model hydrocarbon mixtures or natural oil with ferrous iron-bearing silicates and oxides (representing possible rock-forming materials) at pressure-temperature conditions of the Earth’s lower crust and upper mantle (up to 2000(±100) K and 10(±0.2) GPa), and characterized the run products using Raman and Mössbauer spectroscopies and X-ray diffraction. Our results demonstrate that complex hydrocarbons are stable on their own at thermobaric conditions corresponding to depths exceeding 50 km. We also found that chemical reactions between hydrocarbons and ferrous iron-bearing rocks during slab subduction lead to the formation of iron hydride and iron carbide. Iron hydride with relatively low melting temperature may form a liquid with negative buoyancy that could transport reduced iron and hydrogen to greater depths.
Funder
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation
Subject
Geology,Geotechnical Engineering and Engineering Geology
Cited by
6 articles.
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