Earth Materials. John O'Brien

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Earth Materials - John  O'Brien

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the major minerals in mafic/basic igneous rocks, this phase diagram yields insights into their formation.

Schematic illustration of diopside–anorthite phase diagram at atmospheric pressure.

      The diopside–anorthite phase stability diagram illustrates the temperature–composition conditions under which systems composed of various proportions of diopside and anorthite end member components exist as 100% melt, as melt plus solid crystals and as 100% solid crystals. At high temperatures all compositions of the system are completely melted. The stability field for 100% liquid (red) is separated from the remainder of the phase diagram by the liquidus. The liquidus temperature increases in both directions away from a minimum value for An42 (Di58), showing that either a higher anorthite (An) or a higher diopside (Di) content requires higher temperatures to maintain 100% melt. The phase diagram also shows that at low temperatures the system is completely crystallized. The stability field for 100% solid (blue) is separated from the remainder of the phase diagram by the solidus. For compositions of An100 (Di0) and Di100 (An0), which behave as one‐component systems, the solidus temperature is the same as the liquidus temperature so that the solidus and liquidus intersect at 1553 and 1392 °C, respectively. For all intermediate two‐component compositions, the solidus temperature is a constant 1274 °C.

      The liquidus and solidus lines define a third type of stability field that is bounded by the two lines. This stability field represents the temperature–composition conditions under which both melt and crystals coexist; a liquid of some composition coexists with a solid of either pure anorthite or pure diopside. Two melt plus solid fields are defined: (1) a melt plus diopside field for compositions of <42% anorthite by weight (yellow), and (2) a melt plus anorthite field (green) for compositions of >42% anorthite by weight. The liquidus and the solidus intersect where these two fields meet at a temperature of 1274 °C and a composition of 42% anorthite by weight (An42). This point defines a temperature trough in the liquidus where it intersects the solidus and is called a eutectic point (E in Figure 3.8). Let us use a couple of examples, one representative of compositions of <42% anorthite by weight and the other of compositions of >42% anorthite by weight, to illustrate how this system works.

      The percentage of crystals must increase (from 0 to 100) and the percentage of melt must decrease (from 100 to 0) as cooling proceeds. During this process, the composition of the melt continuously changes down the liquidus and the solids are crystallized in the sequence all diopside prior to the eutectic and diopside plus anorthite at the eutectic. Can we quantify these processes? In Figure 3.8, the proportion of tie line A–B on the solidus side of the system composition line is ~100% and the proportion on the liquidus side of the system composition line is ~0%. This makes sense because crystallization has just begun. So tie line A–B indicates that ~0% solid diopside coexists with ~100% melt of composition An20, at the moment crystallization begins. As the system cools, the percentage of crystals should increase at the expense of the melt as liquid composition evolves down the liquidus, with increasing An content caused by the continuous crystallization of diopside crystals. We can check this by drawing tie lines between the liquidus and the solidus for any temperature in which melt coexists with solids. Tie line C–D provides an example. In horizontal (An) units, this tie line is ~35 units long (An35 – An0 = 35). The proportion of the tie line on the liquidus side of the system composition that represents the percentage of crystals is ~43% (15/35), whereas the proportion of the tie line on the solidus side is ~57% (20/35). The system is 43% diopside crystals (An0) and 57% liquid of composition An35. As the system cools from temperature A–B to temperature C–D, existing diopside crystals grow and new crystals continue to separate from the melt so that the percentage of crystals progressively increases. During this time, melt composition evolves incrementally down the liquidus line toward more anorthite‐rich compositions. When the system approaches the eutectic temperature, the tie line (E–F) is ~42 An units long. The proportion of the tie line (E–F) on the liquidus side approaches 52% (22/42), indicating that the system contains 52% diopside crystals, and the proportion on the solidus side is ~48% (20/42) liquid of composition An42. At the eutectic temperature, diopside and anorthite simultaneously crystallize isothermally until the remaining melt is depleted. The proportion of crystals that form during eutectic crystallization of the remaining melt (48% of the system) is given by the lever rule as 42% (42/100) anorthite crystals and 58% (58/100) diopside crystals. The composition of the final rock is given by the proportions of the tie line between the solid diopside and solid anorthite that lie to the right and left of the system composition line. For this system, with a composition of An20, the lever rule yields a final rock composition of 20% anorthite and 80% diopside.

      The specific example related above is representative of the behavior of all compositions in this system between An0 and An42. When the system cools to the liquidus, diopside begins to crystallize, and as the system continues to cool, diopside continues to crystallize and grow. This causes the composition of the increasingly An‐rich remaining melt to evolve down the liquidus toward the eutectic. Separation of crystals from the melt causes melt composition to change. When the system reaches the eutectic composition, isothermal crystallization of diopside and anorthite occurs simultaneously until no melt remains.

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