Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2023

Presentation information

[J] Online Poster

P (Space and Planetary Sciences ) » P-CG Complex & General

[P-CG20] Origin and evolution of materials in space

Fri. May 26, 2023 10:45 AM - 12:15 PM Online Poster Zoom Room (3) (Online Poster)

convener:Sota Arakawa(Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology), Takafumi Ootsubo(National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, National Institutes of Natural Sciences ), Hideko Nomura(Division of Science, National Astronomical Observatory of Japan), Aki Takigawa(Department of Earth and Planetary Science, The University of Tokyo)


On-site poster schedule(2023/5/25 17:15-18:45)

10:45 AM - 12:15 PM

[PCG20-P02] Evaporation kinetics of forsterite in hydrogen gas and water vapor

*Shiori Inada1, Shogo Tachibana1 (1.the University of Tokyo)


Keywords:protoplanetary disks, evaporation, ater vapor, experiments, kinetics

Introduction: Water vapor is a major oxidant in gas-solid reactions in the early Solar System. A wide variety of oxidation states among chondrites or chondritic components indicates that redox states varied within the chondrite forming region, which could have been caused by heterogeneous water vapor distribution due to accretion and sublimation of icy dust/pebbles [1, 2]. Such heterogeneous distribution of water vapor also explains the oxygen isotope evolution of dust in the inner Solar System [3].
Water vapor may also affect the evaporation kinetics of minerals and melts that was responsible for chemical fractionation in the early Solar System. The effect of water vapor on evaporation of forsterite was theoretically investigated for the Mg2SiO4-H2-H2O system based on the Hertz-Knudsen equation [4, 5]. It was predicted that the evaporation occurs either (1) in the free evaporation-dominated (FED) regime, where the effects of H2 and H2O are ignored, under the low PH2 and PH2O condition, (2) in the hydrogen reaction-dominated (HRD) regime, where the evaporation rate increases proportionally to PH21/2, in the protoplanetary disk-like PH2 condition, or (3) in the H2-H2O buffer-dominated (HBD) regime, where the evaporation rate depends on PH2/PH2O, under the oxidizing or low temperature conditions. Evaporation in the FED and HRD regime is consistent with previous experiments [6, 7], but that in the HBD regime has not been experimentally confirmed yet.

Methods and Results: We carried out evaporation experiments of forsterite single crystal in a vacuum furnace at 1600 and 1350 K. H2 gas was introduced into the furnace and its pressure was kept at 1 Pa. Water vapor was introduced by passing H2 gas above liquid water in the gas supply line. Evaporation rates were obtained from weight losses of the samples.
Forsterite evaporated linearly and congruently both in H2 gas and in the H2-H2O mixed gas as in [6]. The evaporation rates at 1 Pa H2gas were (1.13±0.06) x10-5 and (6.5±0.2) x10-8 mol m–2 s–1 at 1600 and 1350 K, respectively, which are consistent with previous studies [6, 7]. Experiments in 1 Pa of the H2–H2O mixture gas at 1350 K yielded the evaporation rates of (6.9±0.7) x10-9 and (7.4±0.6) x10-9 mol m–2 s–1 at PH2/PH2O of 214±8 and 429±15, respectively.

Discussion: The present experiments confirmed for the first time that water vapor suppresses evaporation of forsterite in the predicted HBD regime. The evaporation rates at 1350 K with PH2/PH2O of ~210 and ~430 are close to each other, suggesting smaller (PH2/PH2O) dependence than that predicted in [5]. If this is the case, the evaporation behavior of forsterite in the presence of water vapor may not be simply expressed by the HK equation, which should be confirmed by further experiments.
It is not clear that evaporation of forsterite obeys the HK equation, but the present study showed that water vapor suppresses the evaporation rate in the HBD regime. When PH2O in protoplanetary disks is enhanced by a factor of ten [1] from that for the system of solar abundance (PH2/PH2O ~2×103 [8]), evaporation of forsterite is expected to occur in the HBD regime at temperature up to ~1600 K under the total pressure of ~10 Pa. The suppressed evaporation in the presence of water vapor extends the timescale of elemental and isotopic fractionation. If evaporation of CAI melts and chondrule melts also obey the evaporation in the HBD regime, the evaporative elemental and isotopic fractionation would have been suppressed under the enhanced PH2O condition.

References: [1] Ciesla F. J. and Cuzzi J. N. (2006) Icarus 181, 178 [2] Ida S. et al. (2021) A&A, A13. [3] Yurimoto H. and Kuramoto K. (2004). Science 305, 1763. [4] Persad A. H. and Ward C. A. (2016) Chem. Rev. 116, 7727. [5] Tsuchiyama A. et al. (1999) GCA 63, 2451.[6] Takigawa A. et al. (2009) ApJ, 707, L97. [7] Tsuchiyama A. et al. (1998) Min. J. 20, 113. [8] Lodders K. (2021) Space Sci. Rev. 217, 44.