The role of pH, temperature, and NH4+ during Mica Weathering
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Lamarca-Irisarri, Daniel; Van Driessche, Alexander E. S.; Jordan, Guntram; Cappelli, Chiara; Huertas Delgado, Francisco JavierEditorial
American Chemical Society
Materia
Hydration Dissolution Precipitation
Fecha
2019-10-22Referencia bibliográfica
Lamarca-Irisarri, D., Van Driessche, A. E. S., Jordan, G., Cappelli, C., & Huertas, F. J. (2019). The Role of pH, Temperature, and NH4+ during Mica Weathering. ACS Earth and Space Chemistry, 3, 2613−2622 . http://doi.org/10.1021/acsearthspacechem.9b00219
Patrocinador
Spanish Government Contracts (MINECO CGL2011-22567 and CGL2014-55108-P); PICS 2017 CNRS program (PICS07954); FPI fellowship (BES-2012-058890) and grants (EEBB-I-16-11519 and EEBB-I-15-10043)Resumen
Phyllosilicates are abundant materials both on Earth and Mars,
and the weathering of these minerals is an essential part of a wide variety of
geochemical cycles. Alteration mainly takes place at the solution−mineral
interface and needs to be fully understood in order to correctly model global
water−rock interactions. To directly link the physicochemical solution
properties to the dominant surface processes controlling phyllosilicate
alteration, we used a custom-built hydrothermal atomic force microscope to
study in situ the surface reactivity of biotite, phlogopite, and muscovite in
contact with aqueous solutions for a broad range of temperatures and pH
values. On the basis of our microscopic observations correlated with
previously obtained macroscopic dissolution rates, we have constructed a
tentative weathering diagram for mica minerals connecting the dominant
surface mechanisms and bulk dissolution behavior to the physicochemical
solution properties (pH, T, and speciation). The resulting diagram can be
divided into two main areas: low-grade weathering occurring at low temperatures and mildly acidic to neutral pH and highgrade weathering taking place at high temperatures and low pH, separated by a transition zone. Each of these areas is
characterized by a series of chemical and physical surface processes, which can be related directly or indirectly to incongruent
and congruent bulk dissolution. The transition temperatures and pH values depend on the type of mica, with biotite being the
most reactive one and muscovite the least reactive one. It is noteworthy that for close to neutral pH conditions the presence of
NH4
+ shifts the transitions from low- to high-grade weathering to a significantly lower temperature.




