日本地球惑星科学連合2018年大会

講演情報

[EJ] 口頭発表

セッション記号 P (宇宙惑星科学) » P-PS 惑星科学

[P-PS06] 太陽系物質進化

2018年5月24日(木) 10:45 〜 12:15 A01 (東京ベイ幕張ホール)

コンビーナ:山口 亮(国立極地研究所)、藤谷 渉(茨城大学 理学部)、癸生川 陽子(横浜国立大学 大学院工学研究院、共同)、鹿山 雅裕(東北大学大学院理学研究科地学専攻)、座長:癸生川 陽子

11:45 〜 12:00

[PPS06-11] Goalpara隕石中の炭素質物質

*甘利 幸子1,2鍵 裕之2 (1.ワシントン大学物理学科、2.東京大学大学院理学系研究科附属地殻化学実験施設)

キーワード:ユレイライト、ダイヤモンド、ラマン、炭化ケイ素

Ureilites comprise a major group of primitive achondrites. They show highly fractionated igneous features, and at the same time they also show primitive characteristics, such as planetary-type noble gases and O-isotopic compositions [1-3]. Ureilites contain a huge amount of noble gases whose characteristics are similar to those of the Q-gases in primitive chondrites. The carrier of these noble gases is known to be diamond [4] and the origin of the diamond has been debated for years. There are two hypotheses. One is that diamond was transformed from graphite by shock-induced high pressure. The other one is that they formed by chemical vapor deposition (CVD).
All mineralogical observations [5-8] support that ureilite diamonds formed via transformation from graphite by shock. There is no mineralogical observation to support the presence of CVD diamonds. A strong support for CVD diamonds comes from simulation experiments of trapping noble gases in CVD diamonds and shock-produced diamonds [9, 10]. To better understand the origin of the diamond and ureilites, we have launched the project to examine carbonaceous matter in ureilites.
2.85 g of Goalpara, provided by The Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, was treated alternately with HF-HCl and HCl to remove silicates followed by H3BO3 treatment to completely dissolve fluorides. The residue was treated with HClO4 at 205°C for 2 hours four times to ensure that reactive carbonaceous materials would be destroyed. We examined the oxidized residue with a field-emission scanning electron microscope JEOL JSM-7000F at The University of Tokyo. Of the 67 grains examined, 54 grains were carbonaceous, 12 grains were Si-rich grains, and one grain was Al-Mg-Fe-Si-rich oxide.
We examined Raman spectra of the grains in the residue. Silicon-rich grains showed peaks at 787-788 cm–1 and 967-968 cm–1. These peaks are consistent with those of 6H-SiC [4].
Many carbonaceous grains in our Goalpara sample show peaks at 1320 – 1332 cm–1. Since the peak of diamond is expected to be at 1332 cm–1, thus the peaks of the grains were shifted toward the lower wave number. Such a shift was also observed in diamond from the ureilite Almahata Sitta, where a peak center ranged between 1318.5 cm–1 and 1330.2 cm–1 [11]. The shift has been attributed to the presence of lonsdaleite, or shock-produced diamond. Alternatively, it has been caused by laser-induced heat [12].

References
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[12] Kagi H. et al. (1994) Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta, 58, 3527-3530.