Abstract

Knowledge about the incorporation and role of carbon in silicate magmas is crucial for our understanding of the deep mantle processes. CO2 bearing silicate melting and its relevance in the upper mantle regime have been extensively explored. Here we report first-principles molecular dynamics simulations of MgSiO3 melt containing carbon in three distinct oxidation states - CO2, CO, and C at conditions relevant for the whole mantle. Our results show that at low pressures up to 15 GPa, the carbon dioxide speciation is dominated by molecular form and carbonate ions. At higher pressures, the dominant species are silicon-polyhedral bound carbonates, tetrahedral coordination, and polymerized di-carbonates. Our results also indicate that CO2 component remains soluble in the melt at high pressures and the solution is nearly ideal. However, the elemental carbon and CO components show clustering of carbon atoms in the melt at high pressures, hinting towards possible exsolution of carbon from silicate melt at reduced oxygen contents. Although carbon lowers the melt density, the effect is modest at high pressures. Hence, it is likely that silicate melt above and below the mantle transition zone, and atop the core-mantle boundary could efficiently sequester significant amounts of carbon without being gravitationally unstable.

Highlights

  • Knowledge about the incorporation and role of carbon in silicate magmas is crucial for our understanding of the deep mantle processes

  • We investigate the high-pressure behavior of carbon bearing silicate melt using first-principles molecular dynamics (FPMD) simulation method[29]

  • In order to explore the effects of oxygen content on the speciation of carbon, we consider three distinct scenarios of dissolved carbon in MgSiO3 system as carbon dioxide (CO2), carbon monoxide (CO), and elemental carbon (C)

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Summary

Introduction

Knowledge about the incorporation and role of carbon in silicate magmas is crucial for our understanding of the deep mantle processes. We investigate the high-pressure behavior of carbon bearing silicate melt using first-principles molecular dynamics (FPMD) simulation method[29]. The CO4 species becomes dominant at pressures above 60 GPa. Strong C-O short-range order is manifested in the corresponding radial distribution function (RDF) with a well-defined peak (Supplementary Fig. S1).

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