Carbon substitution for oxygen in silicates in planetary interiors

Amorphous silicon oxycarbide polymer-derived ceramics (PDCs), synthesized from organometallic precursors, contain carbon- and silica-rich nanodomains, the latter with extensive substitution of carbon for oxygen, linking Si-centered SiO ₓC ₄₋ₓ tetrahedra. Calorimetric studies demonstrated these PDCs...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2013-10, Vol.110 (40), p.15904-15907
Hauptverfasser: Sen, Sabyasachi, Widgeon, Scarlett J., Navrotsky, Alexandra, Mera, Gabriela, Tavakoli, Amir, Ionescu, Emanuel, Riedel, Ralf
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Amorphous silicon oxycarbide polymer-derived ceramics (PDCs), synthesized from organometallic precursors, contain carbon- and silica-rich nanodomains, the latter with extensive substitution of carbon for oxygen, linking Si-centered SiO ₓC ₄₋ₓ tetrahedra. Calorimetric studies demonstrated these PDCs to be thermodynamically more stable than a mixture of SiO ₂, C, and silicon carbide. Here, we show by multinuclear NMR spectroscopy that substitution of C for O is also attained in PDCs with depolymerized silica-rich domains containing lithium, associated with SiO ₓC ₄₋ₓ tetrahedra with nonbridging oxygen. We suggest that significant (several percent) substitution of C for O could occur in more complex geological silicate melts/glasses in contact with graphite at moderate pressure and high temperature and may be thermodynamically far more accessible than C for Si substitution. Carbon incorporation will change the local structure and may affect physical properties, such as viscosity. Analogous carbon substitution at grain boundaries, at defect sites, or as equilibrium states in nominally acarbonaceous crystalline silicates, even if present at levels at 10–100 ppm, might form an extensive and hitherto hidden reservoir of carbon in the lower crust and mantle.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1312771110