Magnesium and calcium carbonate precipitation in serpentinite-hosted alkaline environments: natural and experimental constraints
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Giampouras, EmmanouilEditorial
Universidad de Granada
Departamento
Universidad de Granada. Programa de Doctorado en Ciencias de la TierraMateria
Oman Ophiolite Ronda peridotites Serpentinization CO2 sequestration Carbon mineralization Alkaline springs Carbonate precipitation Magnesium ion effect Crystallization experiments Hydrated magnesium carbonates Amorphous magnesium carbonate Nesquehonite Dypingite
Date
2020Fecha lectura
2020-05-29Referencia bibliográfica
Giampouras, Emmanouil. Magnesium and calcium carbonate precipitation in serpentinite-hosted alkaline environments. Granada: Universidad de Granada, 2020. [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/62913]
Sponsorship
Tesis Univ. Granada.; Funded by the People Programme (Marie Curie Actions) of the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme FP7 (People) under REA grant agreement n° 608001; F7 (Ideas) European Research Council grant “PROMETHEUS” under REA grant agreement nº 340863; Junta de Andalucía research group GIMPY (grant RNM–131); Research and infrastructure grants used in this research have been (co)funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERFD)Abstract
In continental settings, the interaction ofmeteoric water with ultramafic rocks generates
waters of variable physicochemical characteristics owing to serpentinization and
weathering. The discharge of these waters forms aerial alkaline to hyperalkaline spring
systems where waters mix, undergo evaporation, and take up atmospheric CO2, leading
to the formation of carbonate minerals. The understanding of natural carbonation taking
place in such serpentinite-hosted alkaline environments is critical for assessing the role
of this potentially significant sink in the global carbon cycle, and the viability of CO2
sequestration techniques for safe carbon storage.
Serpentinization-driven, alkaline environments provide critical insights into the
natural conditions regarding the capture of atmospheric carbon dioxide through carbon
mineralization. The main objective of this Ph.D. thesis is to advance our understanding
of serpentinization-related alkaline spring systems and the associated precipitation of
carbonate minerals under alkaline conditions. To contribute to this main research goal,
the present Ph.D. thesis aims to (i) provide an additional account of how water
composition, mixing, and mineral precipitation and textures co-evolve in
serpentinization-driven alkaline spring systems in ophiolites, (ii) investigate alkaline
spring sites in subcontinental mantle peridotites and associated mineralizations formed
by the interaction between hyperalkaline fluids and river waters, and (ii) experimentally
investigate the crystallization sequence and morphologies of hydrated magnesium
carbonates, and define the conditions under which their nucleation, crystal growth, and
transformation take place. These aims have been addressed through the study of natural
alkaline springs hosted in exposed oceanic (Samail Ophiolite, Oman) and
subcontinental mantle serpentinized peridotites (Ronda peridotites, Spain), and through
carbonate crystallization experiments, to fill gaps in our current knowledge on the
mechanisms and the conditions characterizing carbonate mineral precipitation in such
systems.
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas 3.0 España
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