High pressure redistribution of nitrogen and sulfur during planetary stratification
Nitrogen is essential to life, and yet is also the most depleted element in the Earth relative to gas-rich chondrites. A key expression of Earth's N depletion is its elevated sulfur-nitrogen (S/N) ratio. Primordial stratification into a core, mantle, and atmosphere is the largest mass transfer...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Geochemical perspectives letters 2021-09, Vol.18, p.37-42 |
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creator | Jackson, C. R. M. Cottrell, E. Du, Z. Bennett, N. R. Fei, Y. |
description | Nitrogen is essential to life, and yet is also the most depleted element in the Earth relative to gas-rich chondrites. A key expression of Earth's N depletion is its elevated sulfur-nitrogen (S/N) ratio. Primordial stratification into a core, mantle, and atmosphere is the largest mass transfer process that terrestrial planets experience, but the data required to evaluate how S/N ratios respond to primordial stratification of Earth-sized planets do not exist. We report new metal-silicate partitioning experiments on N up to 26 GPa and 3437 K. Our data indicate that nitrogen becomes more siderophile with increasing pressure and less siderophile with increasing carbon and nickel in the metal phase. We apply our new experiments with literature data for S partitioning to a core formation-primordial atmosphere degassing model. Our model demonstrates that the S/N ratio of the observable Earth can be set during primordial stratification under the same extreme P-T conditions that satisfy refractory siderophile element budgets while also yielding a bulk planet with S contents near that estimated from Earth's volatility trend. |
doi_str_mv | 10.7185/geochemlet.2122 |
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R. M. ; Cottrell, E. ; Du, Z. ; Bennett, N. R. ; Fei, Y.</creator><creatorcontrib>Jackson, C. R. M. ; Cottrell, E. ; Du, Z. ; Bennett, N. R. ; Fei, Y.</creatorcontrib><description>Nitrogen is essential to life, and yet is also the most depleted element in the Earth relative to gas-rich chondrites. A key expression of Earth's N depletion is its elevated sulfur-nitrogen (S/N) ratio. Primordial stratification into a core, mantle, and atmosphere is the largest mass transfer process that terrestrial planets experience, but the data required to evaluate how S/N ratios respond to primordial stratification of Earth-sized planets do not exist. We report new metal-silicate partitioning experiments on N up to 26 GPa and 3437 K. Our data indicate that nitrogen becomes more siderophile with increasing pressure and less siderophile with increasing carbon and nickel in the metal phase. We apply our new experiments with literature data for S partitioning to a core formation-primordial atmosphere degassing model. 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Our data indicate that nitrogen becomes more siderophile with increasing pressure and less siderophile with increasing carbon and nickel in the metal phase. We apply our new experiments with literature data for S partitioning to a core formation-primordial atmosphere degassing model. 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Our data indicate that nitrogen becomes more siderophile with increasing pressure and less siderophile with increasing carbon and nickel in the metal phase. We apply our new experiments with literature data for S partitioning to a core formation-primordial atmosphere degassing model. Our model demonstrates that the S/N ratio of the observable Earth can be set during primordial stratification under the same extreme P-T conditions that satisfy refractory siderophile element budgets while also yielding a bulk planet with S contents near that estimated from Earth's volatility trend.</abstract><cop>PARIS CEDEX 05</cop><pub>European Assoc Geochemistry</pub><doi>10.7185/geochemlet.2122</doi><tpages>6</tpages><orcidid>https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0272-7989</orcidid><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record> |
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subjects | Geochemistry & Geophysics Physical Sciences Science & Technology |
title | High pressure redistribution of nitrogen and sulfur during planetary stratification |
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