11:00 AM - 11:15 AM
[SIT21-08] The Earth core formation process inferred from phosphorus metal-silicate partitioning
Keywords:Phosphorus, High pressure, Core formation, Metal-silicate partitioning
So far, however, the metal-silicate partitioning of phosphorus has been examined in limited pressure and temperature conditions (e.g., Gu et al., 2019 PEPI). The typical Earth’s core formation conditions have been estimated to be approximately 40 GPa and 3500 K on the basis of the metal-silicate partitioning of other moderately siderophile elements, such as Ni (e.g., Fischer et al., 2015 GCA, Siebert et al., 2012 EPSL), but the partitioning of phosphorus under such high pressure and temperature conditions remains unknown. The results of previous low-pressure experiments suggested the conditions of metal-silicate partitioning of phosphorus to explain its mantle abundance to be around 20 GPa and 1000 K (Siebert et al., 2011 GCA), which is very different from those constrained by other siderophile elements.
In this study, we explored the distribution of phosphorus between coexisting molten iron and silicate melts at high pressures and temperatures, approximately 3500–5000 K and 30–60 GPa, covering the conditions of Earth’s core formation based on a combination of laser-heated diamond-anvil cell experiments and chemical/textural analyses using electron microprobes and secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS). Our results demonstrate that phosphorus becomes more siderophile with increasing pressures. Based on these experimental data, we will present possible models of Earth’s accretion and core formation that explain phosphorus concentration in the mantle.