Magma Redox Geochemistry. Группа авторов

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Magma Redox Geochemistry - Группа авторов страница 14

Magma Redox Geochemistry - Группа авторов

Скачать книгу

melts, approaches reporting the redox state were so far cantered around the sole concept of oxygen fugacity, fO2. Mastering the concept of fO2 in experimental and observational petrology was the key to constrain the processes behind the very large range of relative oxygen fugacity observed on Earth. Although current descriptions of silicate melts and magma thermodynamic properties are mainly based on oxides or mineral-like molecular components, disregarding the actual melt reactivity poses many limits in our understanding of the true chemical exchanges involving oxygen, iron and the other redox-sensitive elements. Because silicate melts, unlike aqueous solutions, lack of a full acid-base description, compositional dependencies are solved by means of empirical treatments based on oxides and their combinations. However, these can bias the interpretation of redox exchanges recorded in analyzed samples and used to identify the several processes (e.g., batch or fractional crystallization, elemental recycling, degassing, deep fluid infiltration) which characterize magma evolution and its geodynamic environment. This short compendium aims at stimulating the quest for a comprehensive and unifying picture of the acid-base and redox properties of melts from which we could extrinsic its reactivity in way similar to aqueous solutions and molten salts.

      1.1.1. Oxidation Number, Electron Transfer, and Half‐Reactions

      Many redox reactions are familiar to us, such as fire and combustion, rusting, and dissolution of metals. Transition metals and main group elements (e.g., N, halogens, O, S, C) have multiple oxidation states and important redox chemistry, which affect element distribution within the geochemical shells on Earth but also through the boundaries between such shells (e.g., Moretti et al., 2020a). For instance, it is the redox state of metals and ligands that complex them, which then determines (i) their “unlocking” from pristine reservoirs (e.g. minerals in which they occur at trace level); (ii) their mobility on Earth through carriers such as magma, water, or vapor; and eventually (iii) their accumulation and precipitations in new phases making up ore deposits.

      Redox reactions involve a coupled transfer of electrons, so for any oxidation (loss of electrons) a reciprocal reduction (gain of electrons) occurs. Moreover, redox reactions naturally occurring on Earth involve a net chemical change that can be described not only via the exchange of electrons between ions or their complexes, but also of oxygen and/or hydrogen atoms and compounds that these can form (e.g., Cicconi et al., 2020a and references therein). Here are some examples:

      (1.2)

      In which the subscripts s, m, aq, and g refer to solid, melt, aqueous, and gas (including supercritical fluids) phases, respectively. In the five examples above, O2(g), H2O(g), Fe3+(aq), O2(g) and SO2(g) are oxidizing agents, whereas Fe(s), FeO(l), H2(g), Fe2+(aq) are the reducing agents.

      (1.8)

      plus the formation of FeO oxides from its ions,

      (1.9)

      in which oxidation numbers and then formal charges of involved atoms do not vary.

      In ore geochemistry, but also in metallurgical practice, a special mention must be made to redox mechanisms involving chalcophile elements and sulfide. Most often, relevant equilibria are written without the involvement of the medium in which they actually occur. Pyrite formation can result from the hydrothermal alteration of igneous pyrrhotite, but their equilibrium can be simply written in the sole Fe–S system as (Barton, 1970):

Скачать книгу