Reaction between Cu-bearing minerals and hydrothermal fluids at 800 °C and 200 MPa: Constraints from synthetic fluid inclusions

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Autoren

  • Dongmei Qi
  • Harald Behrens
  • Roman Botcharnikov
  • Insa Derrey
  • Francois Holtz
  • Chao Zhang
  • Xiaoyan Li
  • Ingo Horn

Organisationseinheiten

Externe Organisationen

  • Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz
Forschungs-netzwerk anzeigen

Details

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Seiten (von - bis)1126-1139
Seitenumfang14
FachzeitschriftAmerican mineralogist
Jahrgang105
Ausgabenummer8
Frühes Online-Datum11 Aug. 2020
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 26 Aug. 2020

Abstract

Transport and deposition of copper in the Earth’s crust are mainly controlled by the solubility of Cu-bearing phases and the speciation of Cu in magmatic-hydrothermal fluids. To improve our understanding of copper mobilization by hydrothermal fluids, we conducted an experimental study on the interaction between Cu-bearing phases (metallic copper, Cu2O, CuCl) and aqueous chloride solutions (H2O ± NaCl ± HCl; with Cl concentrations of 0 to 4.3 mol kg-1). The experiments were run in rapid heat/rapid quench cold-seal pressure vessels at 800 °C, 200 MPa, and logfO2 ~ NNO+2.3. Either Cu or Au capsules were used as containers. The reaction products were sampled in situ by the entrapment of synthetic fluid inclusions in quartz. Fluid composition was subsequently determined by analyzing individual fluid inclusions using a freezing cell and laser ablation inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry. Our results show that large isolated and isometric inclusions, free of late-stage modifications, can be preserved after the experiment even when using a high cooling rate of 25 K s-1. The obtained results demonstrate that: (1) reaction between native Cu, NaCl solution, and quartz (± silica gel) leads to the coexistence of fluid inclusions and Na-bearing silicate melt inclusions. Micrometer- to submicrometer-sized cuprite (Cu2O) crystals have been observed in both types of the inclusions, and they are formed most probably due to the dissociation of CuOH. (2) When Cu0 reacts with HCl and CuCl solutions, or Cu+ reacts with NaCl solution, nantokite (CuCl) formed due to oversaturation has been found in fluid inclusion. Copper concentration in the fluid shows a strong positive dependence on the initial chlorine content, with Cu/Cl molal ratios varying from 1:9 to 1:1 in case 1 and case 2, respectively. When Cl is fixed to 1.5 m, initial fluid acidity has a major control on the Cu content, i.e., 0.17 ± 0.09 and 1.29 ± 0.57 m Cu were measured in fluids of case 1 and case 2, respectively. Cu solubility in pure water and in 1.5 m NaCl solutions are 0.004 ± 0.002 and 0.16 ± 0.07 m, respectively. The main responsible Cu-bearing complexes are CuOH(H2O)x in water, NaCuCl2 in NaCl solutions and HCuCl2 in alkali-free solutions. These results provide quantitative constraints on the mobility of Cu in hydrothermal solutions and confirm that Cl is a very important ligand responsible for Cu transport. The first observation that silicate melt can be generated in the fluid-dominated and native-copper-bearing system implies that transitional thermosilicate liquids can coexist with metal-rich fluids and may enhance Cu mobility in magmatic-hydrothermal systems. This may have important implications for the formation of Cu deposits in the systems with low S activities.

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Reaction between Cu-bearing minerals and hydrothermal fluids at 800 °C and 200 MPa: Constraints from synthetic fluid inclusions. / Qi, Dongmei; Behrens, Harald; Botcharnikov, Roman et al.
in: American mineralogist, Jahrgang 105, Nr. 8, 26.08.2020, S. 1126-1139.

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Qi D, Behrens H, Botcharnikov R, Derrey I, Holtz F, Zhang C et al. Reaction between Cu-bearing minerals and hydrothermal fluids at 800 °C and 200 MPa: Constraints from synthetic fluid inclusions. American mineralogist. 2020 Aug 26;105(8):1126-1139. Epub 2020 Aug 11. doi: 10.2138/am-2020-7114
Qi, Dongmei ; Behrens, Harald ; Botcharnikov, Roman et al. / Reaction between Cu-bearing minerals and hydrothermal fluids at 800 °C and 200 MPa : Constraints from synthetic fluid inclusions. in: American mineralogist. 2020 ; Jahrgang 105, Nr. 8. S. 1126-1139.
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title = "Reaction between Cu-bearing minerals and hydrothermal fluids at 800 °C and 200 MPa: Constraints from synthetic fluid inclusions",
abstract = "Transport and deposition of copper in the Earth{\textquoteright}s crust are mainly controlled by the solubility of Cu-bearing phases and the speciation of Cu in magmatic-hydrothermal fluids. To improve our understanding of copper mobilization by hydrothermal fluids, we conducted an experimental study on the interaction between Cu-bearing phases (metallic copper, Cu2O, CuCl) and aqueous chloride solutions (H2O ± NaCl ± HCl; with Cl concentrations of 0 to 4.3 mol kg-1). The experiments were run in rapid heat/rapid quench cold-seal pressure vessels at 800 °C, 200 MPa, and logfO2 ~ NNO+2.3. Either Cu or Au capsules were used as containers. The reaction products were sampled in situ by the entrapment of synthetic fluid inclusions in quartz. Fluid composition was subsequently determined by analyzing individual fluid inclusions using a freezing cell and laser ablation inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry. Our results show that large isolated and isometric inclusions, free of late-stage modifications, can be preserved after the experiment even when using a high cooling rate of 25 K s-1. The obtained results demonstrate that: (1) reaction between native Cu, NaCl solution, and quartz (± silica gel) leads to the coexistence of fluid inclusions and Na-bearing silicate melt inclusions. Micrometer- to submicrometer-sized cuprite (Cu2O) crystals have been observed in both types of the inclusions, and they are formed most probably due to the dissociation of CuOH. (2) When Cu0 reacts with HCl and CuCl solutions, or Cu+ reacts with NaCl solution, nantokite (CuCl) formed due to oversaturation has been found in fluid inclusion. Copper concentration in the fluid shows a strong positive dependence on the initial chlorine content, with Cu/Cl molal ratios varying from 1:9 to 1:1 in case 1 and case 2, respectively. When Cl is fixed to 1.5 m, initial fluid acidity has a major control on the Cu content, i.e., 0.17 ± 0.09 and 1.29 ± 0.57 m Cu were measured in fluids of case 1 and case 2, respectively. Cu solubility in pure water and in 1.5 m NaCl solutions are 0.004 ± 0.002 and 0.16 ± 0.07 m, respectively. The main responsible Cu-bearing complexes are CuOH(H2O)x in water, NaCuCl2 in NaCl solutions and HCuCl2 in alkali-free solutions. These results provide quantitative constraints on the mobility of Cu in hydrothermal solutions and confirm that Cl is a very important ligand responsible for Cu transport. The first observation that silicate melt can be generated in the fluid-dominated and native-copper-bearing system implies that transitional thermosilicate liquids can coexist with metal-rich fluids and may enhance Cu mobility in magmatic-hydrothermal systems. This may have important implications for the formation of Cu deposits in the systems with low S activities.",
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author = "Dongmei Qi and Harald Behrens and Roman Botcharnikov and Insa Derrey and Francois Holtz and Chao Zhang and Xiaoyan Li and Ingo Horn",
note = "Funding information: We thank Moritz Albrecht, Martin Oeser-Rabe, Ulrich Kroll, and Julian Feige for their technical support. We also thank Hongwu Xu and Kyle Ashley for editorial handling as well as two reviewers (Adam Simon and Ryan Mathur) for their constructive and thorough comments on this manuscript. This research was supported by the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD-57076462) and Graduate School GeoFluxes.",
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publisher = "Walter de Gruyter GmbH",
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TY - JOUR

T1 - Reaction between Cu-bearing minerals and hydrothermal fluids at 800 °C and 200 MPa

T2 - Constraints from synthetic fluid inclusions

AU - Qi, Dongmei

AU - Behrens, Harald

AU - Botcharnikov, Roman

AU - Derrey, Insa

AU - Holtz, Francois

AU - Zhang, Chao

AU - Li, Xiaoyan

AU - Horn, Ingo

N1 - Funding information: We thank Moritz Albrecht, Martin Oeser-Rabe, Ulrich Kroll, and Julian Feige for their technical support. We also thank Hongwu Xu and Kyle Ashley for editorial handling as well as two reviewers (Adam Simon and Ryan Mathur) for their constructive and thorough comments on this manuscript. This research was supported by the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD-57076462) and Graduate School GeoFluxes.

PY - 2020/8/26

Y1 - 2020/8/26

N2 - Transport and deposition of copper in the Earth’s crust are mainly controlled by the solubility of Cu-bearing phases and the speciation of Cu in magmatic-hydrothermal fluids. To improve our understanding of copper mobilization by hydrothermal fluids, we conducted an experimental study on the interaction between Cu-bearing phases (metallic copper, Cu2O, CuCl) and aqueous chloride solutions (H2O ± NaCl ± HCl; with Cl concentrations of 0 to 4.3 mol kg-1). The experiments were run in rapid heat/rapid quench cold-seal pressure vessels at 800 °C, 200 MPa, and logfO2 ~ NNO+2.3. Either Cu or Au capsules were used as containers. The reaction products were sampled in situ by the entrapment of synthetic fluid inclusions in quartz. Fluid composition was subsequently determined by analyzing individual fluid inclusions using a freezing cell and laser ablation inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry. Our results show that large isolated and isometric inclusions, free of late-stage modifications, can be preserved after the experiment even when using a high cooling rate of 25 K s-1. The obtained results demonstrate that: (1) reaction between native Cu, NaCl solution, and quartz (± silica gel) leads to the coexistence of fluid inclusions and Na-bearing silicate melt inclusions. Micrometer- to submicrometer-sized cuprite (Cu2O) crystals have been observed in both types of the inclusions, and they are formed most probably due to the dissociation of CuOH. (2) When Cu0 reacts with HCl and CuCl solutions, or Cu+ reacts with NaCl solution, nantokite (CuCl) formed due to oversaturation has been found in fluid inclusion. Copper concentration in the fluid shows a strong positive dependence on the initial chlorine content, with Cu/Cl molal ratios varying from 1:9 to 1:1 in case 1 and case 2, respectively. When Cl is fixed to 1.5 m, initial fluid acidity has a major control on the Cu content, i.e., 0.17 ± 0.09 and 1.29 ± 0.57 m Cu were measured in fluids of case 1 and case 2, respectively. Cu solubility in pure water and in 1.5 m NaCl solutions are 0.004 ± 0.002 and 0.16 ± 0.07 m, respectively. The main responsible Cu-bearing complexes are CuOH(H2O)x in water, NaCuCl2 in NaCl solutions and HCuCl2 in alkali-free solutions. These results provide quantitative constraints on the mobility of Cu in hydrothermal solutions and confirm that Cl is a very important ligand responsible for Cu transport. The first observation that silicate melt can be generated in the fluid-dominated and native-copper-bearing system implies that transitional thermosilicate liquids can coexist with metal-rich fluids and may enhance Cu mobility in magmatic-hydrothermal systems. This may have important implications for the formation of Cu deposits in the systems with low S activities.

AB - Transport and deposition of copper in the Earth’s crust are mainly controlled by the solubility of Cu-bearing phases and the speciation of Cu in magmatic-hydrothermal fluids. To improve our understanding of copper mobilization by hydrothermal fluids, we conducted an experimental study on the interaction between Cu-bearing phases (metallic copper, Cu2O, CuCl) and aqueous chloride solutions (H2O ± NaCl ± HCl; with Cl concentrations of 0 to 4.3 mol kg-1). The experiments were run in rapid heat/rapid quench cold-seal pressure vessels at 800 °C, 200 MPa, and logfO2 ~ NNO+2.3. Either Cu or Au capsules were used as containers. The reaction products were sampled in situ by the entrapment of synthetic fluid inclusions in quartz. Fluid composition was subsequently determined by analyzing individual fluid inclusions using a freezing cell and laser ablation inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry. Our results show that large isolated and isometric inclusions, free of late-stage modifications, can be preserved after the experiment even when using a high cooling rate of 25 K s-1. The obtained results demonstrate that: (1) reaction between native Cu, NaCl solution, and quartz (± silica gel) leads to the coexistence of fluid inclusions and Na-bearing silicate melt inclusions. Micrometer- to submicrometer-sized cuprite (Cu2O) crystals have been observed in both types of the inclusions, and they are formed most probably due to the dissociation of CuOH. (2) When Cu0 reacts with HCl and CuCl solutions, or Cu+ reacts with NaCl solution, nantokite (CuCl) formed due to oversaturation has been found in fluid inclusion. Copper concentration in the fluid shows a strong positive dependence on the initial chlorine content, with Cu/Cl molal ratios varying from 1:9 to 1:1 in case 1 and case 2, respectively. When Cl is fixed to 1.5 m, initial fluid acidity has a major control on the Cu content, i.e., 0.17 ± 0.09 and 1.29 ± 0.57 m Cu were measured in fluids of case 1 and case 2, respectively. Cu solubility in pure water and in 1.5 m NaCl solutions are 0.004 ± 0.002 and 0.16 ± 0.07 m, respectively. The main responsible Cu-bearing complexes are CuOH(H2O)x in water, NaCuCl2 in NaCl solutions and HCuCl2 in alkali-free solutions. These results provide quantitative constraints on the mobility of Cu in hydrothermal solutions and confirm that Cl is a very important ligand responsible for Cu transport. The first observation that silicate melt can be generated in the fluid-dominated and native-copper-bearing system implies that transitional thermosilicate liquids can coexist with metal-rich fluids and may enhance Cu mobility in magmatic-hydrothermal systems. This may have important implications for the formation of Cu deposits in the systems with low S activities.

KW - Cuprite

KW - Melt Inclusions

KW - Mineral

KW - Nantokite

KW - Native copper

KW - Proper sealing; Applications of Fluid

KW - Quench rate

KW - Silicate melt inclusions

KW - Synthetic fluid inclusions

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U2 - 10.2138/am-2020-7114

DO - 10.2138/am-2020-7114

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85101073896

VL - 105

SP - 1126

EP - 1139

JO - American mineralogist

JF - American mineralogist

SN - 0003-004X

IS - 8

ER -

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