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[SCG53-08] Abiotic Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons Preserved in Melt Inclusions from a Tahitian Mantle Xenolith

Keywords:Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons (PAHs), Peridotites, Organic Matter, Raman Spectroscopy, STXM/XANES, XnCT
In this context, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) in xenocrysts from kimberlite pipes are of particular interest. PAHs have been detected in situ as well as through gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analyses of olivine, garnet, and diamond (e.g., [4]). Although these PAHs are interpreted to have an abiotic origin, their distribution in the mantle and formation processes remain poorly understood.
Here, we report PAHs in melt inclusions in a clinopyroxene (Cpx) grain from a spinel harzburgite xenolith collected on Tahiti, part of the Society hotspot track. To characterize the host Cpx grain, we conducted field-emission scanning electron microscopy with energy-dispersive spectroscopy (FE-SEM-EDS). We extracted three micro-samples containing melt inclusions using a focused ion beam (FIB) system and performed an integrated analytical approach for the micrometer-scale inclusions, including X-ray nano-computed tomography (XnCT), Raman microscopy, wide-field fluorescence microscopy, and X-ray absorption near-edge spectroscopy (XANES) with scanning transmission X-ray microscopy (STXM). FE-SEM-EDS analysis revealed that the host Cpx grain has lower Ti and Al contents and a higher Mg# than those of other Cpx grains in the same sample. The melt inclusions are of crack-healing origin, as indicated by XnCT analyses, which also revealed that they consist of silicate glasses, base-metal sulfides, platinum-group minerals, and C-O-H phases. Raman microscopy, wide-field fluorescence microscopy, and STXM/XANES analyses consistently confirmed the C-O-H phases are dominantly composed of PAHs. Furthermore, STXM/XANES analyses demonstrated that these PAHs contain few aliphatic chains or functional groups and coexist with CO and CO2 in the C-O-H phases.
The detected PAHs are unlikely to be contaminants, as their signals are exclusively observed within the inclusions. The lower Ti and Al contents and a higher Mg# of the host Cpx grain compared to other Cpx grains suggest a deeper origin [5]. Reduced species such as PAHs and CO are present in the C-O-H phases, and the redox state of the Earth's mantle is inferred to become more reduced with increasing depth [6]. Thus, the inclusions were likely trapped under reducing conditions at the base of the stability-field of spinel-bearing peridotites in the upper mantle. Based on experimental studies (e.g., [7]), we propose that the aromatization of simple hydrocarbon molecules occurred within the C-O-H phases of the inclusions, resulting in the abiotic formation of PAHs in the Earth's upper mantle. Whereas most high-pressure and high-temperature experiments have shown that methane predominantly polymerizes into simple saturated hydrocarbons, our findings suggest that PAHs can also be formed under certain conditions in the Earth's upper mantle.
[1] Wang et al. (2023), Acta Geologica Sinica - English Edition. [2] Kenney et al. (2002), Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. [3] Serovaiskii and Kutcherov (2020), Scientific Reports [4] Tomilenko et al. (2016), Doklady Earth Sciences. [5] Adam and Green (1994), Chemical Geology. [6] Frost and McCammon (2008), Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences. [7] Wang et al. (2007), Science in China Series D: Earth Sciences.