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Discovery of nanophase iron particles and high pressure clinoenstatite in a heavily shocked ordinary chondrite: Implications for the decomposition of pyroxene

Authors :
Zhuang Guo
Huifang Xu
Yangting Lin
Mingming Zhang
Shen Liu
Xiongyao Li
Yang Li
Zhidong Xie
Shijie Li
Ian M. Coulson
Source :
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. 272:276-286
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Although pure metallic iron (i.e. that with an Fe content of greater than 99%) commonly occurs in achondrites, and within the returned soil from asteroids or the Lunar surface, it is rarely found in ordinary chondrites meteorites. Abundant nanophase iron particles (np-Fe0) were identified in pyroxene glass, within the shock melt vein of Grove Mountains (GRV) 022115, which is an ordinary (L6) chondrite, with a shock stage determined as S5. The association of np-Fe0, highly defective high pressure clinoenstatite (HP-CEn), silica glass, as well as vesicles, embedded in a pyroxene glass selvage within the shock melt vein in this meteorite suggests that these phases formed as the result of decomposition of the host pyroxene grain, a process induced by the shock event that affected GRV 022115. The reaction to account for this mineral breakdown can be written as: FeSiO3 → Fe + SiO2 + 1/2O2 ↑ (MgSiO3 remain in the HP-CEn). The pressure and temperature condition attending this reaction are estimated at 20–23 GPa and over 1800 °C, as indicated by the surrounded high-pressure mineral assemblage: ringwoodite, majorite, and magnesiowustite. This study provides evidence to the formation of np-Fe0 derived from pyroxene, and HP-CEn quenched metastably in such shocked vein could preserve the metastable phase transitions history record.

Details

ISSN :
00167037
Volume :
272
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f60237e914dffae8b91d5f295a6f5a4a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2019.10.036