The high-pressure, vacancy-stabilized component in clinopyroxenes

Baziotis I; Ma C; Klemme S; Berndt J; Tschauner O; Asimow PD

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Motivated by the recent discovery of albitic clinopyroxene, we assess the molar volume systematics of vacancy-stabilized, high-pressure clinopyroxenes. Previous assessments used the Ca-Eskola component (Ca0.5□0.5)M2AlM1Si2TO6 (where the empty rectangle symbol denotes a vacancy) as an end-member and were limited to compositions with ≤ 50\% vacancies in the M2 site. The discovery of albitic jadeite calls for extension of the solid solution space towards an end member with entirely vacant M2 sites, □M2SiM1Si2TO6, i.e. silica in the C2/c pyroxene structure. Based on our new and compiled data, we fit a model for volumes of clinopyroxenes in an 11-component subsystem. We tested two different scenarios: ideal mixing and symmetric excess volumes. Ideal mixing is easily rejected, as the correlation between vacancy concentration and volume at standard conditions is clearly nonlinear. The symmetric excess volume model, however, yields an adequate fit to the data when using 3 excess terms (Hd-En, Hd-Di, and Hd-Jd). The estimated molar volume of the clinopyroxene-structured silica end member, which has one octahedrally-coordinated silicon atom per formula unit, is 60.77 ± 0.75 cm3/mol on a six-oxygen formula basis, slightly smaller than that of coesite (61.73 cm3/mol) but much larger than that of stishovite (41.44 cm3/mol). We also obtained a molar volume of 62.16 ± 0.75 cm3/mol for the Ca-Eskola component, modestly larger than earlier estimates extrapolated with an ideal mixing assumption from natural samples (60.52 ± 0.73 cm3/mol) or experiments (60.87 ± 0.63 cm3/mol). The proposed volume model provides a partial basis for assessing the formation conditions of vacancy-stabilized pyroxenes.

Details about the publication

JournalAmerican Mineralogist
Volumein press
StatusPublished
Release year2025
DOI10.2138/am-2024-9609
Link to the full texthttps://doi.org/10.2138/am-2024-9609
Keywordsclinopyroxene, high pressure, impact, meteorite,

Authors from the University of Münster

Gerdes, Jasper
Professur für Petrologie (Prof. Klemme)
Klemme, Stephan
Professur für Petrologie (Prof. Klemme)