5:15 PM - 6:45 PM
[SMP24-P13] Platinum-coated plagioclase replacement; preliminary method to evaluate pseudomorphism in dissolution-precipitation process
Keywords:plagioclase replacement, pseudomorphism, platinum coating, overgrowth
We observe the replacement product in platinum-coated labradorite replacement within the quartz-present and quartz-absent bulk rock. The hydrothermal experiments were conducted using pairs of starting coated minerals or polycrystalline grain (labradorite, An66Ab33Or1; hornblende schist with labradorite An67-78Ab33-28; gabbro with labradorite An40-70Ab60-30) and 2M KCl aqueous solutions with W/R=2. The vessel condition is 600°C and 150-200 MPa for 2 and 5-day experiments. The samples were coated with platinum powder with thicknesses of 30 nm and 90 nm.
In the absence of quartz, the replacement in single crystal and polycrystalline show a similar result of ~20% porous anorthite and homogenous Kfs overgrowth (~20 um length) for ~40% of the initial volume, while the porosity generated 10-30% for 5 days. Secondary minerals found in the coated samples indicate the platinum remains unreacted and Kfs predominantly overgrew, enclosing the platinum layer.
In quartz-present gabbro, amorphous silica grains are found on the platinum layer (~5 um) and there is no observed mineral overgrowth. A thicker platinum layer suggests increased capability in limiting the fluid infiltration to the middle of the aggregate despite the layer exhibiting granular texture after the experiment.
The replacement of labradorite in quartz absent fluid is beneficial to evaluate the pseudomorphism. The result suggests that in the presence of a platinum layer, fluid chemistry at the reaction interface can be maintained, allowing micropore generation while still enabling the tracing of the external volume.
This experiment reveals the platinum coating is effective in determining whether the dissolution is spatially coupled with precipitation. This finding provides a better understanding of the replacement mechanism in the metamorphic process, particularly in single-crystal experimental studies.