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English Pages 514 Year 1987
REVIEWS IN MINERALOGY VOLUME
17
THERMODYNAMIC MODELING OF GEOLOGICAL MATERIALS: MINERALS, FLUIDS AND MELTS EDITORS:
I.S.E. Carmichael & H.P. Eugster
AUTHORS: Robert C. Newton Dept of the Geophysical Sciences University of Chicago Chicago, Illinois 60637 David A. Crerar Alexandra Navrotsky Dept of Geological & Geophysical Sciences Princeton University Princeton, New Jersey 08544 Bernard J. Wood Dept of Geological Sciences Northwestern University Evanston, Illinois 60201 Kenneth S. Pitzer Department of Chemistry University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California 94720 John H. Weare Department of Chemistry University of California, San Diego La Jolla, California 92093
SERIES
EDITOR:
Lukas Baumgartner Hans P. Eugster John M. Ferry Dimitri A Sverjensky Dept of Earth & Planetary Sciences The Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, Maryland 21218 John R. Holloway Depts of Chemistry and Geology Arizona State University Tempe, Arizona 85287 George H. Brimhall Ian S.E. Carmichael Dept of Geology & Geophysics University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California 94720 Robert G. Berman Thomas H. Brown Dept of Geological Sciences University of British Columbia Vancouver, BC, Canada V6T 2B4 Mark S. Ghiorso Dept of Geological Sciences University of Washington Seattle, Washington 98195
Paul H. Ribbe Department of Geological Sciences Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State University Blacksburg, Virginia 24061
COPYRIGHT 1987 MINERALOGICAL
SOCIETY OF AMERICA
Second Printing. 1989. Printed by BcokCrafters,
Inc .•Chelsea. Michigan.
REVIEWS IN MINERALOGY ( Formerly: SHORT COURSE NOTES) ISSN 0275-0279 Volume
17: THERMODYNAMIC MINERALS,
MODELING FLUIDS
OF GEOLOGIC
MATERIALS:
AND MELTS
ISBN 0-939950-21-9 ADDITIONAL COPIES of this volume as well as those listed below may be obtained at moderate cost from the MINERALOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA. 1625 I Street. N.W .• Suite 414. Washington. D.C. 20006 U.S.A. Volume 11: Carbonate.: Mlnaralogy and Chemi.try, 1983; R. J. Reader, Ed. 394 pp. Nine chapters on crystal chemistry. polymorphism, microstructures and phase relations of the rhombohedral and orthorhombic carbonates; the kinetics of CaCO, dissolution and precipitation; trace eJements. and isotopes in sedimentary car1lonates; the occurrence. solubility and solid solution behavior of Mg-calcites; geoIoQlc thermobarornetry using metamorphic carbonates. ISBN# O-M9950-15-4.
Volume 1: Sulfide Mineralogy, 1974; P. H. Rlbbe, Ed. 284 pp. Six chapters on the structures of sulfides and sulfosatts; the ~~l~~~~=~~~~~~~Synttesis.
phase
·Volume 2: Feld."ar Mineralogy, 2nd Edition, 1983; P. H. Rlbbe, Ed. 362 pp. Thirteen chapters on feldspar chemistry, structure and nomenclature: Al,Si order/disorder in relation to domain textures, diffraction patterns, lattice parameters and optical properties; determinative methods; subsoltdus phase refatlons, microstructures, kinetics and mechanisms of exsolution, and diffusion; color and interference colors; chemical properties; deformation. ISBN# 0-939950-14-6.
Volume 12: Auld Inclu.lon., 1984; by E. Roedder. 844 pp. Nineteen chapters providing an introduction to studies of all types of fluid inclusions, gas, liquid or meft, trapped in materials from the earth and space. and their application to the understanding of geological processes. ISBN# 0-939950-16-2.
Volume 4: Mineralogy and Geology of Natural Zeolite., 19n; F. A. Mumpton, Ed. 232 pp. Ten chapters on the crystal chemistry and structure of natural zeolites, their occurrence in sedimentary and Iow.grade metamcrphlc rocks and closed hydrc>~ic systems, their oommercial properties and utilization. ISBN# 0-939950-04-9.
Volume 13: Mlc8l,1984; S. W. Bailay, Ed. 584pp. Thirteen Charters on structures. crystal chemistry. spectroscopic and op:~~c%v"&"~:~~s~~~e;~~jg~'t~':g~s.
~~~:~x!~m:,~;u;;:e 18-9.
Volume 6: Marine Minerals, 1979; R. G. Bums, Ed. 380 pp. Ten chapters on manganese and iron oxkies, the silica po{ymorphs, zeolites, clay minerals, marine phosphorites, barites and placer minerals; evaporite mineralogy and chemistry. ISBN# 0-939950-06-5.
~~trolyles;
~~\~n~~~ 19-7.
Crystallography,
1985; by M. B. 8010-
1~~:xs~~n3~~f:~~~~~ and probfem sets, including
~~~~"{,~t~~[~P~t~~~:",~i~N~i~~9~~9ro:
~~~:,.e.~:.: 1~'::1~. ~~':::y:~~~~~a~~:'~~~': J~=~~:'!
Ed •. 570 pp. Starting with the theoretical, kinetic and experimental aspects of isotopic fractionation, 14 chapters deal with stable isotopes in the early solar system, in the mantle, and in the igneous and metamorphic rocks and ore deposits, as well as in magmatic volatiles, natural water, seawater, and in meteoric-hydrothermal systems. ISBN #0-939950-20-0.
irreversible thermcdyPyriboles-MlnSeven chapters
~~~~':'.~.~ 7A~~:;,n~r:~~~~~.e~~n'~~~:~~C~1 :,a~~~~:: michael, Ed •• 500 pp. Thermodynamic analysis of phase equilibria in simple and multi-component mineral systems, and thermcdynamlc models of crystalline solutions. igneous gases and fluid. ore fluid. metamcrphlc fluids. and silicate melts, are the subjects of this 14-chapter volume. ISBN # 0-939950-21-9.
~~.i~r~~r~:"!':::J~=r~~Yo"i':~~~~ ;X::d~~e;::: lations; amphibole and serpentine asbestos-mineralogy, occurrences, and health hazards. ISBN#
o=-~~i':'"4SB~;'~-~fg~i
~:~~~:~tdo~t~ ~?~·9=~~Bravai~ presented with numerous exam~es
Volume 8: Kinetics of Geochemical Processe., 1981; A. C. Lasaga and R. J. Kirkpatrick, Eds. 398 pp. Eight chapters on transition state theory and the rate laws of chemical reactions; kinetics of weatheri~ dfagenesis, igneous crystallization and goo-
Volume 9A: Amphiboles and Other Hydrous eralogy, 1981; D. R. Veblen, Ed. 372 pp.
and pe-
:~3
Volume 15: Mathematical
Volume 7: Pyroxenes, 1980; C. T. Prewitt, Ed. 525 pp. Ninll chapters on pyroxene crystal chemistry. spectroscopy. phase equilibria, subsondus phenomena and thermodynamics; cornposition and minerak)Qy of terrestrial, lunar, and meteoritic pyroxenes. ISBN# 0-939950-07-3.
~~~'1'~II~~~;0~~39~re-Ol
geochemistry
Volume 14: Microscopic to Macroscopic: Atomic Envlronmenll to Minerai Thermodynamic., 1985; S. W. Kieffer and A. Navrotsky, Ed •• 428 pp. Ektven chapters attempt to answer the question, "What minerals exist under given constraints of
Volume 5: Orthosilicates, 2nd Edition, 1982; P. H. Ribbe, Ed. 450 pp. Uebau's "Classification of Silicates" plus 12 chap. ters on silicate garnets, oIivines, spinels and humites; zircon and the actinide orthosilicates; titanite (sphene), chloritoid. staurolite. the aluminum silicates, topaz, and scores of miscellaneous orthosilicates. Indexed. ISBN# 0-939950-13-8.
0-939950-10-3.
Volume 9B: Amphiboles: Petrology and Experimental Phase Relations, 1982; D. R. Veblen and P. H. Ribbe, Ed •• 390 pp. Three chapters on phase relations of metamorphiC amphiboles (occurrences and theory); igneous amphiboles; experimental studies, ISBN# 0-939950-11-1.
Volume 18: Spectroscopic Methods In Mlnaralogy and Geology, 1988; F. C. Hawthome, Ed. 898 pp. Detailed explanations and encyciopedlc discussion of applications of spectroscopies of major importance to earth sciences. Included are IR. optical. Raman, Mossbauer. MAS NMR, EXAFS. XANES, EPR. ~~9:~~~~minescence. XRF. PIXE. RBS and EELS. ISBN #
Volume 10: Characterization of Metamorphllm through Minerai Equilibria, 1982; J. M. Feny, Ed. 397 pp. Nine chapters on an algebraic approach to composition and reaction spaces and their manipulation; the Gibbs' formulation of phase equilibria; ge0logic thermobarometry; buffering, infiltration, isotope fractionation, compositional zoning and inclusions; characterization of metamorphic fluids. ISBN# 0-939950-12-X.
Volume 19: Hydrous Phytioallicates (exclusiva of micas), 1988; S. W. Bailey, Ed. 698 pp. Seventeen chapters covering the crystal structures. crystal chemiStry. serpentine, kaolin. talc, pyrophyllite, chlorite. vermiculite, smectite. mixed-layer, sepiol~e. palygorskite, and mcdulated type hydrous phyllosilicate minerals.
ii
REVIEWS IN MINERALOGY
VOLUME 17
FOREWORD The editors and authors of this volume presented a short course, entitled "Thermodynamic Modeling of Geological Materials: Minerals, Fluids amd Melts," October 22-25, 1987, at the Wickenburg Inn near Phoenix, Arizona. This was the fourteenth in a series of such courses sponsored by the Mineralogical Society of America since 1974, and this is the eighteenth book published under the banner, Reviews in Mineralogy [Volume 9 was issued in two parts -- see list of available titles on the opposite page]. The text of this volume was assembled from author-prepared, camera-ready copy __ thus the wide variety in style and font types represented. Mrs. Marianne Stern patiently and skillfully did most of the paste-up of Volume 17.
Paul H. Ribbe Series Editor Blacksburg, VA
PREFACE When Van't Hoff calculated the effect of solution composition on the gypsum-anhydrite transition a century ago, he solved a significant geochemical problem (Hardie, 1967). Other well known examples of the early use of chemical thermodynamics in geology are Bowen's calculations of the plagioclase melting loop and the diopside-anorthite eutectic (Bowen, 1913, 1928). Except for a few specialists, however, these techniques were largely ignored by earth scientists during the first half of the 20th century. The situation changed dramatically by the 1950's when more and better thermodynamic data on geologic materials became available, and when thermodynamic arguments of increasing sophistication began to permeate the petrologic and geochemical literature. This rejuvenation was spearheaded by D.S. Korzhinskii, H. Ramberg, J.B. Thompson, J. Verhoogen and others. Today a graduating petrologist or geochemist can be expected to have a thorough grounding in geological thermodynamics. Rapid intellectual growth in a field brings with it the difficulty of keeping abreast of parallel and diverging specialties. In order to alleviate this problem, we asked a group of active researchers to contribute up-to-date summaries relating to their specialties in the thermodynamic modeling of geological materials, in particular minerals, fluids and melts. Whereas each of these topics could fill a book, by covering the whole range we hope to emphasize similarities as much as differences in the treatment of various materials. For instance, there are useful parallels to be noted between Margules parameters and Pitzer coefficients. The emphasis here is on modeling, after the required data have been collected, and the approach ranges form theoretical to empirical. We deliberately imposed few restrictions on the authors. Some chose to interpret modeling in the rigorous thermodynamic sense, while others approached their topics from more general geochemical viewpoints. We hope that any lack of unity and balance is compensated for by a collection of lively and idiosyncratic essays in which students and professionals will find new ideas and helpful hints. If the selection appears tilted towards fluids, it is because other recent summaries have emphasized minerals and melts. This volume could not have been assembled without the dedication, cooperation and understanding of every author and his or her typist(s), and without the unselfish efforts of the Series Editor and current President of MSA, Paul Ribbe. As a tribute to the foremost iii
geochemist of the century, we wish to dedicate this volume to the memory of V.M. Goldschmidt, on the eve of his 100th birthday. References: Bowen, N.L. (1913) Melting phenomena of the plagioclase feldspars. Amer. J. Sci. 35, 577590. Bowen, N.L. (1928) The Evolution of the Igneous Rocks. Princeton Univ. Press, Princeton, NJ, 322 p. Hardie, L.A. (1967) The gypsum-anhydrite equilibrium at one atmosphere pressure. Amer. Mineral. 52,171-200.
I.S.E. Carmichael
H.P. Eugster
Berkeley, California
Baltimore, Maryland August
iv
1987
Thermodynamic Modeling of Geological Materials: Minerals, Fluids and Melts TABLE
OF CONTENTS
Page ii
iii iii
COPYRIGHT; ADDITIONAL COPIES FOREWORD PREFACE
Chapter 1
Robert C. Newto
THERMODYNAMIC
ANALYSIS OF PHASE EQUILIBRIA
IN SIMPLE MINERAL SYSTEMS 1 5
5 5 8 9 10 11 12 16
23 27 27
28 28
lN1RODuCTIoN MgO-AlP3-Si02 PERIDOTITE MINERALS General approach Enstatite and forsterite Pyrope Spinel - a disordered phase MgTs - a fictive substance Cordierite in peridotites ALUMINUM SILICATES CALCIUM-ALUMINUM SILICATES CONTINUOUS DEHYDRATION REACTIONS -- HYDROUS CORDIERITE FERROUS IRON MINERALS SUMMARY ACKNOWLEDGMENTS REFERENCES
Chapter 2
Alexandra Navrotsk MODELS
35 37 39 42 44 46 51 51
52 60 63 66 66 67
OF CRYSTALLINE
SOLUTIONS
lN1RODuCTION SOME THERMODYNAMIC FORMALISMS THE IDEAL SOLUTION -- THE ENTROPY OF MIXING TERM REGULAR, SUBREGULAR AND GENERALIZED MIXING MODELS SYSTEMATICS IN MIXING PROPERTIES PHASES WITH DIFFERENT STRUCTURES ORDER-DISORDER IN SOLID SOLUTIONS General comments Cation interchange equilibria, especially in spinels Carbonates - calcite and dolomite structures Feldspar solid solutions CONCLUSIONS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS REFERENCES
v
Bernard J. Wood
Chapter 3 THERMODYNAMICS CONTAINING 71 78 78 79 79 80 80 80 81 81 81 83 84 84 84 84 84 85 85 85 85 85 88 90 92 93 93
OF MULTICOMPONENT SEVERAL
SOLID SOLUTIONS
COMPUTATIONOFMULTICOMPONENT, MULTIPHASEEQUILIBRIA METHODOF APPROACH TREATMENTOF SOLIDSOLUTIONS Partial molar entropy of mixing Excess free energies of mixing THE SYSTEMSAS, MAS, CAS ANDNAS Albite CaA12Si06 pyroxene and anorthite MgAl204 Spinel CMAS SYSTEM Pyroxenes Gamets FeO-Alp3-Si02 SYSTEM Fayalite Ferrosilite Almandine Hercynite COMPLEXSOLIDSOLUTIONS Olivine Gamet Plagioclase Pyroxenes CALCULATIONOF COMPLEXPHASEDIAGRAMS SUMMARY Adirondack granulites ACKNOWLEDGMENTS REFERENCES
Kenneth S. Pitzer
Chapter 4 A THERMODYNAMIC SOLUTIONS 97 98 100 100 103 105 108 109 111 112 112 112 116 117
SYSTEMS
MODEL
FOR AQUEOUS
OF LIQUID-LIKE
DENSITY
lN1RODUCTION NOTATION EXCESSGIBBSENERGY;ACTIVITYANDOSMOTICCOEFFICIENTS Basic equation Pure electrolytes Mixed electrolytes Neutral solutes Association equilibria TEMPERATUREANDPRESSUREEFFECTSON STANDARDSTATEPROPERTIES DATA BASE Standard-state values for 25°C Standard-state enthalpies, entropies, heat capacities, and volumes Pure-electrolyte parameters for 25°C Pure-electrolyte parameters for high temperatures vi
121 123 123 123 123 125 126 127 127 133 138
Mixing Parameters ApPLICATIONS
Solubilities of solids Complex ion equilibria Vapor-phase equilibria Thermal properties SUPPLEMENTARY COMMENTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ApPENDIX A: THEORETICAL ApPENDIX B: NUMERICAL EXPRESSIONS REFERENCES
BACKGROUND PARAMETERS
FOR TEMPERATURE
Chapter 5
John H. Wear
MODELS
OF MINERAL
SOLUBILITY
BRINES WITH ApPLICATION 143 145 148 153 155 155
160 162 166 171 171 174
DEPENDENCY
IN CONCENTRATED
TO FIELD OBSERVATIONS
lN1RODuCTION OVERVIEW OF THE MODEL MODELS FOR SYSTEMS SHOWING SPECIFIC INTERACTION
STRONG
ION PAIRS vs
ASSOCIATION:
INCLUSION OF TEMPERATURE AND PRESSURE AS VARIABLES MODELS FOR POORLY DETERMINED SYSTEMS COMPARISON OF HMW MODEL TO OTHER MODELS OVERVIEW OF THE APPLICATION OF MODELS TO NATURAL ENVIRONMENTS ApPLICATION TO PERMIAN AND MIOCENE EVAPORITES IN THE SEAWATER SYSTErAPPLICATION TO RECENT AND PRESENT DAY Ev APORA TION PROCESSES ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ApPENDIX REFERENCES
Chapter 6
Dimitri A. Sverjenskj
CALCULATION
OF THE THERMODYNAMIC
PROPERTIES
OF AQUEOUS SPECIES AND THE SOLUBILITIES OF MINERALS IN SUPERCRITICAL ELECTROLYTE 177
lN1RODUCTION
177
COMPUTATIONAL STRATEGY FOR MINERAL HYDROLYSIS CONSTANTS FOR MINERALS
181 181 182 182 186 188 188 191 195
195 195
SOLUBILITY
SOLUTIONS
CALCULATIONS
Standard molal Gibbs free energies of minerals Standard molal Gibbs free energies of gases Standard molal Gibbs free energies of aqueous species DISSOCIATION
CONSTANTS
OF AQUEOUS
SPECIES
Standard molal Gibbs free energies of aqueous complexes Standard molal entropies, heat capacities and volumes of complexes at 25 DC and 1 bar Equation of state coefficients for aqueous complexes ACTIVITY
COEFFICIENTS
OF SOLUTE
Solute species Charged species vii
SPECIES
AND ACTIVITY
OF THE SOLVENT
196 196 197 197 197 200 200 200 201 201 203 204 204
Neutral species Activity of the solvent COMPUTATIONAL APPROACH ILLUSTRATIVE EXAMPLES
Aqueous speciation of lead and chloride in supercritical chloride-bearing fluids Temperature dependence Pressure dependence Dependence on pH Dependence on HClo Solubility of galena in supercritical chloride-bearing solutions CONCLUDING REMARKS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS REFERENCES
John R. Holloway
Chapter 7 IGNEOUS 211 212 212 212 213
214 214 215 215
217 217 218
219 219 219 221 221 221
223 223 223 223 225
225 225 226 229 229 229 231 231 231 232 232
FLUIDS
lN1RODUCTION PROPERTIES OF MOLECULAR SPECIES IN FLUIDS
Size and shape Attractive forces between molecules Permanent dipole-permanent dipole forces Dispersion forces Higher order permanent moments Potential energy relations Relative importance of attractive forces EQUATIONS OF STATE
Two-parameter equations Corresponding states Empirical equations Treatment of mixtures THE NATURE OF IGNEOUS FLUIDS
Properties of H20 Dissolved solutes Silica Alkali chlorides The nature of igneous fluids in the crust and upper mantle EQUILIBRIA IN C-O-H SYSTEMS
Free energy relations Methods of equilibrium calculation Minimization of total free energy Equilibrium constants and mass balance Solution for the C-O-H system Graphite undersaturatedjluid calculations Representation of results ADDITION OF OTHER COMPONENTS
Cl, F, and N Modeling fluid/melt systems IGNEOUS FLUID CALCULATIONS IN THE FuTURE ACKNOWLEDGMENTS REFERENCES
viii
George H. Brimhall
Chapter 8 ORE FLUIDS: 235
MAGMATIC
and David A. Crer
TO SUPERGENE
INTRODUCTION
Part I: The Generation of Magmas and Ore Fluids 236
PRE-METALLOGENIC
237 237 239 240 240
GENERATION OF MAGMAS AND PLUTONS AT SUBDUCTION ZONES
240 242 242 243 243
244 244 246
246 246 247 247 247 249 249 249 250
250 250 252
252 254 254
HISTORY OF MAGMAS
Oceanic zones Continental zones CLASSES OF ORE-FORMING PLUTONS
Magmatic source rocks Utility of biotite mineral chemistry Hornblende, biotite, and muscovite Classification by redox state and biotite halogen composition Classification of granitic plutons by intensive variables Oxygen fugacity HFIHp fugacity Correlation of ores with plutonic classes Physical implications of magmatic water Energy release Hydrothermal convection Lifetimes of hydrothermal systems SOURCES AND GENERAL COMPOSITIONS OF HYDROTHERMAL
SOLUTIONS
Sources of water Composition COMPOSITION OF MAGMATIC
WATER
Water solubility in silicate melts Partitioning of ore components between magmas and exsolving water Chloride and sulfur Cations and metals Magmatic to hydrothermal transition: the biotite sensor Compositions of hydrothermal biotites Early high temperature hydrothermal oxidation Relative importance of magmatic and meteoric waters Part II: Physical Chemistry of Hydrothermal Ore Fluids
255 255 255 257 257
257 257 259 259
259 260 261 261
261 261 263 263 264
SOL VENT -SOLUTE CONTROLS ON ORE SOLUTIONS
The water molecule Water structure, hydrogen bonding and polarity Dielectric constant of water Solvating power of water Coulomb's law Hydration Solvation energies Effects of temperature and pressure on the dielectric constant Temperature Pressure Effects of temperature and pressure on ionization Other effects of pressure and temperature on water-solute interactions Molecular vibration Ligand field stabilization Pressure-induced electron spin-pairing TRANSITION METAL COMPLEX IONS
Geologically important ligands ix
265 265 265 268 270 270 272 272 274 275 275 276 277 277 279 281 281
Chemical controls Hard-soft behavior Electonegativity, LFSE and ionic potential Why solubilities increase with temperature RECENT
EXAMPLES
AND APPLICATIONS
Molecular structures of complex ions Stoichiometries Stability constants Ore zoning Metal-organic complexing Activity coefficients Major salts Three main non-ideal effects Minor components in concentrated solutions Mineral solubility calculations from thermodynamic data How accurate are calculated solubilities? Estimating chemical conditions in mineral deposits Part III: Formation of Primary and Secondary Ore Deposits
283 283 284 284 285 286 287 287 287 287 289 289 290 290 292 292 294 296 296 296 297 297 298 302 306 308 308 308 308 310 310 310 310 311 311
PRIMARY
ORE DEPOSITION
Initial acidity Sulfur pH and alteration reactions pH buffer capacity Boiling Remaining deposition controls Temperature Dilution Oxygenfugacity Multi-stage mineralization and ore metal remobilization Ore metal remobilization versus introduction Relationships of wall rock alteration to mineralization Hypogene leaching Thermodynamic modeling of hypogene oxidation and sulfidation: effects of magmatic volatiles on hydrothermal fluids and proto res Destruction of wall rock buffer control: the role of biotite Feedback of chemical reaction andfluidflow: Fluid dominated threshold state and the importance of the advanced argillic alteration mineral assemblage Epithermal systems: Manifestations of deep porphyry mineralization? SECONDARY
ORE DEPOSITION
Atmosphere-dominated states Constitutive mass balance models and simplified chemical controls Residual enrichment Supergene enrichment Thermodynamic and fluid flow modeling of supergene enrichment Hypogene enrichment byferrolysis Internal factors Weathering paths in physical properties Primary permeability Available SUlfur External factors Geomorphic conditions Optimal conditions for secondary enrichment and preservation Steady state versus transient flow effects ACKNOWLEDGMENTS REFERENCES
x
Chapter 9
John M. Ferry and Lukas Baumgartn
THERMODYNAMIC
MODELS OF MOLECULAR FLUIDS
AT THE ELEVATED PRESSURES AND TEMPERATURES
OF
CRUSTAL METAMORPHISM 323 326 326 328 329 329 329 330 330 330 331 333 333 335 335 340 340 341 342 345 345 346 346 346 348 348 348 352 352 353 353 354 354 356 356 356 358 358 360 362 363 363
INTRODUCTION THERMODYNAMICS
OF FLUIDS WITH VARIABLES
V AND T
Intemal energy Entropy Helmholtz free energy Chemical potential Fugacity and fugacity coefficient EQUATIONS
OF STATE
Virial equation One-component fluids Fluid mixtures Redlich-Kwong equation One-component fluids Relationship between Redlich-Kwong and virial equations Fluid mixtures FuGACITIES
FROM EQUATIONS
OF STATE
Fugacities from virial equation of state Fugacities from Redlich-Kwong equation of state A note on the Lewis and Randall Rule EQUATIONS
OF STATE IN THE GEOCHEMICAL/PETROLOGICAL
LITERATURE
Virial equations of state, Redlich-Kwong equations of state Holloway-Flowers version Bottinga- Touret-Richet version Halbach-Chatterjee version Bowers-Helgeson version Kerrick-Jacobs version MINERAL-FLUID
EQUILIBRIA
AND EVALUATION
OF EQUATIONS
OF STATE
Basic equation for mineral-fluid equilibrium Equilibria and the thermodynamic data base Diagrams to evaluate equations of state Dolomite-quartz-talc-calcite Calcite-quartz-wollastonite Muscovite-calcite-quartz-sanidine-anorthite Zoisite-calclte-anorthite Discussion APPLICATIONS OF THE REDLICH-KWONG HIGHER-ORDER FLUID SOLUTIONS
The system C-O-H The system C-O-H-S The system C-O-H-S-N ACKNOWLEDGMENTS REFERENCES
xi
EQUATION
TO TERNARY
AND
Chapter 10
Hans P. Eugster and Lukas Baumgartner MINERAL SOLUBILITIES AND SPECIATION IN SUPER CRITICAL
367 368 369 371 371 373 375 376 376 376 377 377 377 377 379 379 379 381 381 381 383 383 385 385 387 387 389 389 391 391 391 394 397 398 398
METAMORPHIC
INTRODuCTIoN EQUATION of STATE FOR SOLUTES WATERASASOLVENT The solvent Quartz Corundum K-spar and muscovite Albite and paragonite Brucite and portlandite Magnetite DISSOCIATION CONSTANTS OF CHLORIDE COMPLEXES FROM CONDUCTIVITY DATA HCl NaCl KCl CaC12 MgC12 FeCl2 MINERAL SOLUBILITIES IN SUPERCRITICAL HzO-HCl MIXTURES Background Experimental methods METAL-CHLORIDE FREE ENERGIES AND SPECIATION KCl NaCl MgC12 CaC12 FeCl2 MnCl2 and NiC12 HzO-C02 MIXTURES AS SOLVENTS ACTIVITY COEFFICIENTS SPECIATION CALCULATIONS The methodology Speciation in the system MgO-CaO-Si02-HzO-HCl SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS REFERENCES
Chapter 11
R. G. Berman and T. H. Brown
DEVELOPMENT
OF MODELS
ANALYSIS 405 406 408
FLUIDS
FOR MULTICOMPONENT
OF SYNTHETIC
INTRODUCTION THEORETICAL CONSIDERATIONS Speciation models
xii
SYSTEMS
MELTS:
410 411 412 412 412 414 416 417 418 419 422 422 426 427 427 432 436 437 437
Stoichiometric solution models EXPERIMENTAL
CONSTRAINTS
Thermodynamic properties of melts Glass-liquid relationships Heat capacity of glasses Heat capacity of liquids Volumetric properties of liquids Enthalpy and entropy offormation and fusion Mixing properties of liquids Thermodynamic properties of minerals METHODOLOGY
Calibration of thermodynamic models Testing of calibrations APPLICATIONS
Speciation models Stoichiometric models CONCLUSIONS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS REFERENCES
Chapter 12
Mark S. Ghiorso
MODELING MAGMATIC SYSTEMS: 443 443 445 448 451 452 454 459 460 460 461 462 463
RELATIONS
INTRODUCTION
General constraints on the formulation of melt models Review of models that satisfy the thermodynamic requirements CALIBRATION CALCULATING
METHODS SOLID-LIQUID
EQUILIBRIA
Notation and mathematical statement of the problem An algorithm for finding the minimum of G Modeling irreversible reactions GENERALIZED
THERMODYNAMIC
POTENTIALS
Legendre transformations Minimization of generalized thermodynamic potentials SUMMARY REFERENCES
Chapter 13
Mark S. Ghiorso and Ian S.E. Carmichael
MODELING MAGMATIC SYSTEMS: 467 467 473 473 476 478 486 490 491 495 495 497
THERMODYNAMIC
PETROLOGIC ApPLICATIONS
INTRODUCTION THERMODYNAMIC CLASSIFICATION OF IGNEOUS ROCKS ACTIVITY OF SILICA AND DEPTH OF ORIGIN OF MAFIC MAGMAS
Silica activity and magmas Silica activity of basic magmas and a petrogenetic grid FRACTIONAL CRYSTALLIZATION OF OLIVINE THOLEIITIC ASSIMILATION OF PELITE INTO THOLEIITIC MAGMA ISOCHORIC CRYSTALLIZATION ISOBARIC VESICULATION SUMMARY APPENDIX REFERENCES
xiii
MAGMA
Chapter 1
Robert C. Newton
THERMODYNAMIC
ANALYSIS OF PHASE EQUILIBRIA
IN SIMPLE MINERAL
SYSTEMS
INTRODUCTION Knowledge of the thermodynamic properties of minerals has become of great importance in prediction of the physical and chemical conditions of the formation of mineral assemblages and as a guide to the synthesis of minerals. The three major sources of information are thermochemical and thermophysical measurements, derivation from experimental phase equilibrium data at elevated temperatures and pressures, and attempted reproduction of the expected temperatures and pressures of natural assemblages, under the assumption of "frozen-in" equilibrium (method of paragenetic analysis). All of these methods have made important contributions to the body of thermodynamic data, and comparison of results from the three independent sources is valuable in cross-checking, systemization and extending of the data sets. The most important properties of minerals for stability calculations are heat capacity, entropy, enthalpy of formation at one bar and molar volume as a function of temperature and pressure. This information is needed for end-member substances and for solid solutions. The volume properties are relatively easily and accurately measured by X-ray diffraction, but the thermal properties are much harder to evaluate accurately for complex substances. The most direct information is supplied by calorimetry, both thermophysical (heat capacity measurements) and thermochemical (enthalpy of solution measurements). Less direct but increasingly important sources of information are spectroscopy, such as infrared absorption, especially at low temperatures (Kieffer, 1981), electrochemical measurements, as in the solid electrolyte cell (Sato, 1971), and vapor pressure measurement, as with the high-temperature Knudsen cell (Rammansee and Fraser, 1982). The most extensively-used source of thermodynamic data of minerals remains derivation from experimental phase equilibrium diagrams, although the thermochemical and thermophysical methods approach the phase equilibrium method in comprehensiveness and potential accuracy. The precision of enthalpy of solution work is not quite at a level which allows generally accurate calculation of phase equilibrium. Nevertheless, constraints provided by thermochemical measurements are very important in initializing prase equilibrium calculations, and, in turn, phase equilibrium data are of utmost importance in optimizing thermodynamic parameters within the uncertainty limits of calorimetry, and in discriminating between conflicting sets of thermochemical measurements. The simplest kind of experimental equilibrium for deriving thermodynamic data is the univariant P-T curve of a reaction among pure substances. An example is the decarbonation of magnesite (MgC03) to periclase (MgO): MgC03
= MgO + CO2.
(A)
The general equation of equilibrium for simple devolatilization
is ( 1)
where dG is the free energy change, d V S the difference in volume between the solid products and reactants, n is the coefficient of the volatile species in the balanced equation, fv is the fugacity of the volatile species, in this case CO2, and R is the gas constant (8.3144 J/K). Experiments locating the P-T curve of Reaction (A) define, with the aid of equation (1), the most important property of magnesite, its free energy of formation 1
from the oxides (dGt) at one bar pressure by: dGt
(magnesite)
=
-dGA -,
(2)
The free energy of reaction may be expressed further as: (3) dW and dSo are, respectively, the changes in standard enthalpy and entropy of the reaction, likewise expressible as differences in standard enthalpies and entropies of formation of the products and reactants. The standard enthalpy of a substance at any temperature is related to that at any reference temperature, usually taken as 298.15 K, by integration of the heat capacity, Cp: H(T) - H(298.15) = fT298.1SCpdT.
(4)
Heat capacities above 298 K can usually be expressed as polynomial functions of temperature. A form convenient for representation of measured data is (Robie et aI., 1978) : Cp
a + bT + cIT2 + d/.yT + eT2.
=
(5)
Truncated forms lacking some of the terms are commonly used. The standard entropy of a substance may be expressed as a Third Law entropy plus a configurational term for those substances with possibility of significant residual atomic disorder at zero Kelvin, such as Al,Si disorder of feldspar: S(T)
= fo T(Cp/T)dT
+ S (conf.).
(6 )
The entropy of disorder of a mineral can sometimes be characterized by some physical measurement, such as X-ray diffraction, as ' S (conf.)
=
-RIXi
In Xi
(7)
for each atomic site, where Xi are the molar fractions of the atoms mixing on a site. The free energies of compression, -RT In fv, of H20 and CO2 are well measured in the ranges 0-1300 K and 1-10000 bars (Burnham et aI., 1969; Shmulovich and Shmonov, 1978). The fugacities of other volatiles, and of volatile mixtures, are much less well known, but can be approximated from theoretical considerations, such as the hard-sphere Modified Redlich-Kwong (MRK) equation of state (HOlloway, 1977; Kerrick and Jacobs, 1981). Extrapolation beyond measured pressure ranges by the MRK procedure may not be trustworthy (Haselton et aI., 1978). Very accurate work at elevated temperatures and pressures above a few kbar requires use of expansivities, a, and compressibilities, B, of the solids: V(T,P)
=
V(298.15)[l
+ a(T-298)
- BPI.
(8)
Since a is, in general, a function of pressure, and B of temperature, and since few high temperature and high pressure measurements of these quantities exist, some authors ignore a and B in derivation of thermodynamic data from phase equilibria (Connolly and Kerrick, 1984; Berman et aI., 1985). In a few propitious reactions, such as magnesite decarbonation, thermodynamic parameters of minerals may be determined accurately from one or a few experimental brackets of univariant equilibria. Where several or numerous experimental brackets of a 2
single equilibrium are available, various statistical treatments may be applied, and where a number of experimental brackets of several equilibria involving minerals in common are available, multiple regression (Gasparik and Newton, 1984) or Monte Carlo (Perkins et aI., 1981) methods may be used. In the latter method, large numbers of trial parameters are inserted into the thermodynamic equations, and the combination of parameters yielding minimal total deviation from experimental points or bracket midpoints is sought. In the method of linear parametric analysis ("linear programming"), as developed by Gordon (1973), allowable ranges of some parameters, such as standard entropy and enthalpy changes of a reaction, are defined by the composite restriction of experimental points. The most important thermodynamic parameter to be derived by analysis of phase equilibria is the enthalpy of formation, dWf 298' from the oxides or elements, because data obtainable from physicochemical measurements, principally solution calorimetry, are usually not precise enough for accurate calculations. Heat capacities are often fixed by thermophysical data, though they may sometimes be optimized within small ranges (Halbach and Chatterjee, 1984). Standard entropies are sometimes fixed by precise low-temperature heat capacity measurements, but are often uncertain to the extent of a configurational entropy. A practical problem is that samples too large to be synthesized by ordinary methods are often required for adiabatic calorimetry. Measurements on near-end-member natural samples require uncertain corrections for impurities. For these reasons standard entropies may be derived from phase equilibria even where heat capacity measurements exist. Molar volumes are almost always fixed by X-ray diffraction measurements. Thermodynamic analysis of univariant equilibria in oxide-silicate systems is conveniently referred to a generalization of expressions (1), (3), (4) and (6) (cf. Day and Kumin, 1980): L'lCp P dHof , S , 298 - Tdsof , S, 298 - fT298dTfT298 (9) Tf,s dT + f1 dVsdP + nRT In fv =
0 (a)
> 0 (b)
< 0 (c) dWf ~ 298 and SOf S.298 are, respectively, the differences in enthalpy and entropy of formation from the dxioes of the solid products and reactants: dH\s,298
= InidWf,298,i
with a similar coefficients.
expression
(solid products) - ImidWf,298,i for dsof
S 298' ' ,
where
nand
(solid
reactants),
(10)
m are the stoichiometric
At (T,P) points within the field of stability of the condensed (left-hand) assemblage, (9b) applies, and for the (T,P) region where devolatilization occurs, (sc) applies. Regression methods to obtain dHof S 298 and dsof S 298 with (9a) commonly use midpoints of isothermal or isobaric expehmental brackets or points on empirical curves drawn through the brackets. In this method, if dWf S 298 and dsoi$ 298 are best-fit quantities to all of the brackets, then, at a bracket mid-point (Ti,Pi): Equation (9a) becomes (11) where c)i is the free energy deviation of the bracket midpoint from the best-fit curve. Optimal dH\S,298 and dS\S,298 are found by minimizing the sum of the squared 3
deviations:
a(l:5r) (12)
0;
These expressions lead to two equations in the two unknowns dWf,s,298 and dS\s,298: pdH\s,298
- (ITi)dS\s,298
+ (Iki)
=
0, (13)
where p is the number of brackets. Methods using the inequalities (9b) and (9c), principally linear parametric analysis, make use of individual experimental data points. Examples of the use of these methods are given below. Since, in general, there can be at most j - 1 independent reactions among j phases, the number of conditions (10) will not be sufficient to determine all of the d H 298 quantities, one or more of which must be evaluated by other means, such as sotutlon calorimetry, if superior measurements exist. These "anchor phases" (Holland and Powell, 1985) are used to derive the less well known or unknown properties-of the other phases. Alternatively, a set of parameters from thermochemical measurements is used as initial input in multiple regression (Halbach and Chatterjee, 1984). The parameters are allowed to vary within the stated limits of the thermochemical measurements, and the set yielding the smallest composite residuals from experimental data is found. 0
Free energy, enthalpy and entropy of mixing in solid solutions are important in many calculations of mineral equilibria. These quantities are especially hard to define accurately by thermochemical and thermophysical methods, and are often derived from experimental phase equilibrium data. Discussion of solid solutions is deferred, for the most part, to Chapters 2 and 3 by A. Navrotsky and B.J. Wood. Serious problems with retrieval of thermodynamic parameters from phase equilibria have become apparent, especially where solid solutions are involved and where ordinary regression techniques are applied without regard to constraints from thermochemical measurements (see discussion by Cohen, 1986). Three major sources of error are: (a) too many parameters regressed from too few data points, (b) high correlation of derived parameters, as in the simultaneous retrieval of Fe,Mg mixing parameters of coexisting garnet and olivine (O'Neill and Wood, 1979), and (c) insufficient temperature, pressure, or composition baselines of experimental data. Temperature dependences of standard and solid solution free energies have characteristically been overestimated from the last source of error. Rigorous definition of uncertainties in derived thermodynamic properties is very difficult, or sometimes virtually impossible; the cumulative uncertainties in experimental observations, input thermochemical data, unknown validity of assumptions and approximations such as ideal solution behavior, uncertainties in volatile fugacities, especially where extended by theoretical equations of state, and neglect of solubility of the solids in the vapor, as in "pure water" calculations, tend to discourage rigorous treatments. Somewhat arbitrary criteria may be adopted, such as the extreme slopes of regression lines which can be drawn through plotted data points or the mean deviations of derived parameters from thermochemically measured ones (Day and Kumin, 1980; Halbach and Chatterjee, 1984). Discussions of error analysis in derivation of thermodynamic properties are given in Bird and Anderson (1973), Anderson (1977), Zen (1977) and Demarest and Haselton (1981). The last paper demonstrates that, for isothermal or isobaric pairs of runs
4
which bracket an equilibrium curve, if the half-width of the bracket is greater than the experimental temperature or pressure uncertainties of the runs, which is usually the case, the brackets are not subject to Gaussian error distribution and, hence, cannot be used in rigorous error propagation. Another problem is that error analysis based on individual brackets undoubtedly overestimates uncertainties in reaction parameters. The net constraint of many experimental brackets of a single univariant curve is often very stringent: a practically unique line may sometimes be demanded by a set of experimental brackets covering large P-T ranges, subject to the additional constraint of constant sign of curvature (no inflections). Thus, the composite constraint exacted by a number of brackets must considerably reduce the uncertainty in the free energy of the reaction. To the author's knowledge, no rigorous treatment of the multiple-bracket effect is available in the literature. For these reasons, the present paper, following the majority of authors (cf. Berman et aI., 1986), does not attempt definition of standard errors of derived parameters, but concentrates instead on internal consistency and optimization. The purpose of this chapter thermodynamic properties of some to show the correspondence between of the strengths and limitations of methods.
is to illustrate some common rock-forming measured and derived the thermochemical,
of the methods of deriving minerals, principally silicates, quantities, and to indicate some experimental and paragenetic
MgO-AI203-Si02 PERIDOTITE MINERALS General approach A comprehensive thermodynamic dataset is most conveniently built up by considering simple subsystems, such as MgO-AI203-Si02, for which there are many univariant equilibria with good experimental coverage. In this way complicating factors of solid solution are kept to a minimum. Standard properties of minerals may be derived by a step-wise process, in which the least ambiguous and most reliable data are selected to define the properties of a few minerals, and these properties in turn define those of other minerals through more complex reactions (Powell, 1978; Helgeson et aI., 1978). Alternatively the thermodynamic properties of a mineral subset are derived simultaneously by regression of experimental data available for all reactions in the subset (Holland and Powell, 1985). The former method has the advantage that the bestdetermined mineral properties serve as a foundation, whereas the latter method tends to distribute the uncertainties more broadly. The latter method has the advantage that it does not run the risk of biasing the entire dataset through misjudgment of the most reliable experimental data. The step-wise approach is illustrated in the Si02-undersaturated portion of the system MgO-AI203-Si02. This model peridotite system includes the phases forsterite, enstatite, pyrope, spinel and Mg-cordierite. Some of the most rigorously constraining data consist of single brackets, which favors the step-wise approach. Enstatjte and forsterjte A convenient starting point is the reactions of enstatite and forsterite with magnesite. Several workers have calculated the free energy of formation of magnesite from the reversed experimental data of Harker and Tuttle (1955) on Reaction (A), using Equation (1). The most comprehensive analysis is that of Robinson et al. (1982), which is accepted here. The input parameters d V sand fv are very accurately known at the temperatures (600°-900°C) and pressures (100-2800 bars) of the equilibrium and contribute almost negligible uncertainties. The uncertainty from all sources in dG ° f (magnesite) is of the order of 350 J. From dGof (magnesite), the corresponding quantities for enstatite and forsterite are obtained from the reactions:
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