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Electronic
heat trap grips deep Earth
Thursday, November 13, 2008
The
diamond anvil cell squeezes samples to inner-Earth pressures
between two diamond tips.
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Credit:
Carnegie Institution of Washington
The key to
understanding Earth’s evolution, including how our
atmosphere gained oxygen and how volcanoes and earthquakes form,
is to look deep, really deep, into the lower mantle -- a region
some 400 to 1,800 miles (660 to 2,900 kilometers) below the
surface. Researchers at the Carnegie Institution’s
Geophysical Laboratory simulated conditions at these depths and
recently discovered that the concentration of highly oxidized
(ferric) iron (Fe3+) in the two major mantle minerals
is key to moving heat in that region. Such heat transfer affects
material movement throughout the planet. They also discovered
that less oxidized (ferrous) iron (Fe2+) has much
smaller effect than expected. The results, reported in the
November 13, issue of Nature, call into question current
models of mantle dynamics.
Lead author of the
study Alexander Goncharov explains: “The lower mantle sits
on top of the core where pressures range from 230,000 to 1.3
million times the pressure at sea level. Temperatures are
unimaginable—from about 2,800 to 6,700 °F. About 80% of
the mantle is made of iron-containing silicate perovskite, while
the mineral ferropericlase makes up the rest. The iron in both of
these minerals strongly influences many properties of matter.
Goncharov and team
developed a new optical spectroscopy system to reveal how matter
absorbs heat from infrared through ultraviolet wavelengths; in
addition they measured how energy is dissipated. They subjected
the minerals to mantle pressures—up to 1.3 million
atmospheres at room temperature and to 590,000 atmospheres at
temperatures up to 1160°F.
The
scientists, including a co-author who was an NSF-sponsored summer
college intern Benjamin Haugen, found that heat absorption is
governed by the concentration of ferric (Fe3+)
iron in silicate perovskite and ferropericlase. Their results for
silicate perovskite in the visible and near infrared showed that
heat absorption is dominated by the transfer of electron charges
during oxidation—the process of electron loss—in the
oxide O-Fe 3+.
“Our results
show that the conductivity of heat in this part of the lower
Earth is driven by the amount of ferric iron in the mantle and
the process of losing and gaining electrons,” said
co-author Viktor Struzhkin. “We’ll need to use this
new collection of information to reexamine how mantle plumes and
other dynamic features of this remote realm are affected.”
Steven Jacobsen, a
co-author from Northwestern University, formerly a postdoctoral
fellow at Carnegie, and a member of the Carnegie DOE Alliance
Center (CDAC), remarked, “The amount of light we are able
to see through these mantle materials under extreme pressures and
temperatures is telling us a lot about how effectively heat is
transported out of the core and through the mantle.”
Source:
Carnegie Institution of Washington

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