Formation of nickel–iron meteorites by chemical fluid transport

ABSTRACT The deposition of solid material from the gas phase via chemical vapor transport (CVT) is a well-known process of industrial and geochemical relevance. There is strong evidence that this type of thermodynamically driven chemical transport reaction plays a significant role in certain natura...

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Main Author: Werner Schrön
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ScienceOpen 2016-09-01
Series:ScienceOpen Research
Online Access:https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=38f9f140-efbe-4e88-9285-64b27949e805
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spelling doaj-5afa469d985149e69b67201d33ecfa852020-12-15T17:21:33ZengScienceOpenScienceOpen Research2199-10062016-09-0110.14293/S2199-1006.1.SOR-EARTH.A2TIA5.v1Formation of nickel–iron meteorites by chemical fluid transportWerner Schrön ABSTRACT The deposition of solid material from the gas phase via chemical vapor transport (CVT) is a well-known process of industrial and geochemical relevance. There is strong evidence that this type of thermodynamically driven chemical transport reaction plays a significant role in certain natural processes. This article presents detailed evidence that CVT is a highly plausible mechanism for the formation of iron meteorites. In this study, naturally occurring CVT is referred to as “chemical fluid transport” (CFT) and the end products deposited from the gas phase as “fluidites.” Treating iron meteorites as cosmic fluidites enables simple solutions to be found to the problem of how they formed and to numerous related and in some cases unresolved questions. This study is based on a thermodynamic trend analysis of solid–gas equilibrium reactions involving chlorine- and fluorine-containing compounds of 42 chemical elements that include a systematic examination of reaction dominance switching behavior. The study shows that octahedrites, hexahedrites and ataxites formed as a result of the transport of metal chlorides and fluorides (CFT) during accretion within the solar nebula. Siderophile elements are characterized by the similarities in their chemical transport properties. These chemical properties of the elements play a key role in determining the chemical composition of iron meteorites. The deposition of nickel–iron bodies occurs via back reaction after the transport of the gaseous halides. The back reaction leads to the thermodynamically favored deposition of schreibersite before troilite and of troilite before kamacite/taenite. The deposition temperature of octahedrites and hexahedrites lies below the temperature at which Widmanstätten patterns would be destroyed, while that of ataxites lies slightly above. Similarly, the occurrence of thermally instable cohenite in meteorites provides further support for the fluidite character of irons. The variation in the trace element concentrations in iron meteorites is explained by enrichment and depletion mechanisms in the gas phase. The striking correlation between gallium and germanium abundances in iron meteorites is the result of similarities regarding the mobilization phase and the reaction dominance switching behavior of both elements, and crystal isomorphism. These findings are supported by numerous arguments that provide evidence for the CFT model. The occurrence of the mineral lawrencite FeCl2 in meteorites is interpreted as an indication of the effectiveness of the chemical transport of FeCl2. The presence of meteorite alteration and the observed deviations from the solar elemental abundances in silicate meteorites are also explained in terms of the effectiveness of CFT-based mobilization. https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=38f9f140-efbe-4e88-9285-64b27949e805
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Werner Schrön
spellingShingle Werner Schrön
Formation of nickel–iron meteorites by chemical fluid transport
ScienceOpen Research
author_facet Werner Schrön
author_sort Werner Schrön
title Formation of nickel–iron meteorites by chemical fluid transport
title_short Formation of nickel–iron meteorites by chemical fluid transport
title_full Formation of nickel–iron meteorites by chemical fluid transport
title_fullStr Formation of nickel–iron meteorites by chemical fluid transport
title_full_unstemmed Formation of nickel–iron meteorites by chemical fluid transport
title_sort formation of nickel–iron meteorites by chemical fluid transport
publisher ScienceOpen
series ScienceOpen Research
issn 2199-1006
publishDate 2016-09-01
description ABSTRACT The deposition of solid material from the gas phase via chemical vapor transport (CVT) is a well-known process of industrial and geochemical relevance. There is strong evidence that this type of thermodynamically driven chemical transport reaction plays a significant role in certain natural processes. This article presents detailed evidence that CVT is a highly plausible mechanism for the formation of iron meteorites. In this study, naturally occurring CVT is referred to as “chemical fluid transport” (CFT) and the end products deposited from the gas phase as “fluidites.” Treating iron meteorites as cosmic fluidites enables simple solutions to be found to the problem of how they formed and to numerous related and in some cases unresolved questions. This study is based on a thermodynamic trend analysis of solid–gas equilibrium reactions involving chlorine- and fluorine-containing compounds of 42 chemical elements that include a systematic examination of reaction dominance switching behavior. The study shows that octahedrites, hexahedrites and ataxites formed as a result of the transport of metal chlorides and fluorides (CFT) during accretion within the solar nebula. Siderophile elements are characterized by the similarities in their chemical transport properties. These chemical properties of the elements play a key role in determining the chemical composition of iron meteorites. The deposition of nickel–iron bodies occurs via back reaction after the transport of the gaseous halides. The back reaction leads to the thermodynamically favored deposition of schreibersite before troilite and of troilite before kamacite/taenite. The deposition temperature of octahedrites and hexahedrites lies below the temperature at which Widmanstätten patterns would be destroyed, while that of ataxites lies slightly above. Similarly, the occurrence of thermally instable cohenite in meteorites provides further support for the fluidite character of irons. The variation in the trace element concentrations in iron meteorites is explained by enrichment and depletion mechanisms in the gas phase. The striking correlation between gallium and germanium abundances in iron meteorites is the result of similarities regarding the mobilization phase and the reaction dominance switching behavior of both elements, and crystal isomorphism. These findings are supported by numerous arguments that provide evidence for the CFT model. The occurrence of the mineral lawrencite FeCl2 in meteorites is interpreted as an indication of the effectiveness of the chemical transport of FeCl2. The presence of meteorite alteration and the observed deviations from the solar elemental abundances in silicate meteorites are also explained in terms of the effectiveness of CFT-based mobilization.
url https://www.scienceopen.com/document?vid=38f9f140-efbe-4e88-9285-64b27949e805
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