Tremolite decomposition on Venus II. Products, kinetics, and mechanism

We present revised tremolite powder thermal decomposition kinetics using previous and newly acquired data from longer time (years instead of months) and lower temperature experiments (

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Veröffentlicht in:Icarus (New York, N.Y. 1962) N.Y. 1962), 2003-08, Vol.164 (2), p.317-333
Hauptverfasser: Johnson, Natasha M., Fegley, Bruce
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container_title Icarus (New York, N.Y. 1962)
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creator Johnson, Natasha M.
Fegley, Bruce
description We present revised tremolite powder thermal decomposition kinetics using previous and newly acquired data from longer time (years instead of months) and lower temperature experiments (
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S0019-1035(03)00102-7
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Tremolite crystals and crystalline powder decompositions follow different but related Avrami–Erofe'ev (nucleation and growth) kinetic models. The rate equations for thermal decomposition of tremolite crystalline powder and the larger crystal grains are log 10 k powder (h −1)=18.69(±0.19)−23,845(±833)/ T and log 10 k crystal (h −1)=19.82(±0.07)−25,670(±916)/ T. The associated apparent activation energies are 456(±16) kJ mol −1 and 491(±18) kJ mol −1, respectively. We propose a decomposition mechanism and suggest that decomposition and dehydroxylation occur simultaneously. The rate-limiting step is proposed to be structural rearrangement of the amphibole structure to the two pyroxenes and silica. This step and the overall decomposition rate are predicted to be independent of pressure from 1 to 100 bars. 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The rate equations for thermal decomposition of tremolite crystalline powder and the larger crystal grains are log 10 k powder (h −1)=18.69(±0.19)−23,845(±833)/ T and log 10 k crystal (h −1)=19.82(±0.07)−25,670(±916)/ T. The associated apparent activation energies are 456(±16) kJ mol −1 and 491(±18) kJ mol −1, respectively. We propose a decomposition mechanism and suggest that decomposition and dehydroxylation occur simultaneously. The rate-limiting step is proposed to be structural rearrangement of the amphibole structure to the two pyroxenes and silica. This step and the overall decomposition rate are predicted to be independent of pressure from 1 to 100 bars. 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Products, kinetics, and mechanism</atitle><jtitle>Icarus (New York, N.Y. 1962)</jtitle><date>2003-08-01</date><risdate>2003</risdate><volume>164</volume><issue>2</issue><spage>317</spage><epage>333</epage><pages>317-333</pages><issn>0019-1035</issn><eissn>1090-2643</eissn><abstract>We present revised tremolite powder thermal decomposition kinetics using previous and newly acquired data from longer time (years instead of months) and lower temperature experiments (&lt;1073 K). We also present kinetic results for decomposition of millimeter- to centimeter-sized tremolite grains. Natural tremolite samples were heated at ambient pressure in flowing CO 2 or N 2 gas from 1023–1238 K. The tremolite decomposition products are a physical mixture of two pyroxene solid solutions (with the bulk composition Dp 59En 41), a silica polymorph, and water vapor. Decomposition rates were calculated by using the mass loss of the heated samples. Tremolite crystals and crystalline powder decompositions follow different but related Avrami–Erofe'ev (nucleation and growth) kinetic models. The rate equations for thermal decomposition of tremolite crystalline powder and the larger crystal grains are log 10 k powder (h −1)=18.69(±0.19)−23,845(±833)/ T and log 10 k crystal (h −1)=19.82(±0.07)−25,670(±916)/ T. The associated apparent activation energies are 456(±16) kJ mol −1 and 491(±18) kJ mol −1, respectively. We propose a decomposition mechanism and suggest that decomposition and dehydroxylation occur simultaneously. The rate-limiting step is proposed to be structural rearrangement of the amphibole structure to the two pyroxenes and silica. This step and the overall decomposition rate are predicted to be independent of pressure from 1 to 100 bars. 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subjects Kinetics
Mechanism
Mineralogy
Tremolite
Venus
title Tremolite decomposition on Venus II. Products, kinetics, and mechanism
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