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Title: Anomalous elastic behavior of phase egg, AlSiO3(OH), at high pressures
Phase egg, [AlSiO3(OH)], is an aluminosilicate hydrous mineral that is thermodynamically stable in lithological compositions represented by Al2O3-SiO2-H2O (ASH) ternary, i.e., a simplified ternary for the mineralogy of subducted sediments and continental crustal rocks. High-pressure and high-temperature experiments on lithological compositions resembling hydrated sedimentary layers in subducting slabs show that phase egg is stable up to pressures of 20–30 GPa, which translates to the transition zone to lower mantle depths. Thus, phase egg is a potential candidate for transporting water into the Earth’s mantle transition zone. In this study, we use first-principles simulations based on density functional theory to explore the pressure dependence of crystal structure and how it influences energetics and elasticity. Our results indicate that phase egg exhibits anomalous behavior of the pressure dependence of the elasticity at mantle transition zone depths (~15 GPa). Such anomalous behavior in the elasticity is related to changes in the hydrogen bonding O-H···O configurations, which we delineate as a transition from a low-pressure to a high-pressure structure of phase egg. Full elastic constant tensors indicate that phase egg is very anisotropic resulting in a maximum anisotropy of compressional wave velocity, AvP ≈ 30% and of shear wave velocity, AvS ≈ 17% at zero pressures. Our results also indicate that the phase egg has one of the fastest bulk sound velocities (vP and vS) compared to other hydrous aluminous phases in the ASH ternary, which include topaz-OH, phase Pi, and d-AlOOH. However, the bulk sound velocity of phase egg is slower than that of stishovite. At depths corresponding to the base of mantle transition zone, phase egg decomposes to a mixture of d-AlOOH and stishovite. The changes in compressional DvP and shear DvS velocity associated with the decomposition is ~0.42% and –1.23%, respectively. Although phase egg may be limited to subducted sediments, it could hold several weight percentages of water along a normal mantle geotherm.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1753125 1634422
NSF-PAR ID:
10089001
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ;
Date Published:
Journal Name:
The American mineralogist
Volume:
104
ISSN:
1945-3027
Page Range / eLocation ID:
130–139
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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