Abstract

The solubility of platinum and palladium in a silicate melt of the composition Di 55 An 35 Ab 10 was determined at 1200°C and 2 kbar pressure in the presence of H2O-H2 fluid at an oxygen fugacity ranging from the HM to WI buffer equilibria. The influence of sulfur on the solubility of platinum in fluid-bearing silicate melt was investigated at a sulfur fugacity controlled by the Pt-PtS equilibrium at 1200°C and a pressure defined in such a way that the $$ f_{H_2 O} $$ and $$ f_{O_2 } $$ values were identical to those of the experiments without sulfur. The experiments were conducted in a high pressure gas vessel with controlled hydrogen content in the fluid. Oxygen fugacity values above the NNO buffer were controlled by solid-phase buffer mixtures using the two-capsule technique. Under more reducing conditions, the contents of H2O and H2 were directly controlled by the argon to hydrogen ratio in a special chamber. The hydrogen fugacity varied from 5.2 × 10−2 bar (HM buffer) to 1230 bar ( $$ X_{H_2 } $$ = 0.5). Pt and Pd contents were measured in quenched glass samples by neutron activation analysis. The results of these investigations showed that the solubility of Pt and Pd increases significantly in the presence of water compared with experiments in dry systems. The content of Pd within the whole range of redox conditions and that of Pt at an oxygen fugacity between the HM to MW buffer reactions are weakly dependent on $$ f_{O_2 } $$ and controlled mainly by water fugacity. This suggests that, in addition to oxide Pt and Pd species soluble at the ppb level in haplobasaltic melts, much more soluble (ppm level) hydroxide complexes of these metals are formed under fluid-excess conditions. Despite a decrease in water fugacity under reducing conditions, Pt solubility increases sharply near the MW buffer. It was shown by electron paramagnetic resonance spectrometry that, in contrast to dry melts, fluid-saturated silicate melts do not contain a pure metal phase (micronuggets). Therefore, the increase in Pt solubility under reducing conditions can be explained by the formation of Pt hydride complexes or Pt-fluid-silicate clusters. At a sulfur fugacity controlled by the Pt-PtS equilibrium, the solubility of Pt in iron-free silicate melts as a function of redox conditions is almost identical to that obtained in the experiments without sulfur at the same water and oxygen fugacity values. These observations also support Pt dissolution in iron-free silicate melts as hydroxide species.

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.