Abstract
The coordination environment of Ti(IV) in seven natural and synthetic glasses of basaltic, trachytic, rhyolitic composition as well as four tektites has been studied using high-resolution Ti K-edge x-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy at ambient temperature and pressure. Pre-edge features of Ti K-edge XANES spectra for these glasses suggest that [5]Ti is the dominant Ti coordination in all volcanic glasses. However, in the less polymerized glasses studied (basaltic and trachytic), [6]Ti is also important (30–50% of the total Ti) but [4]Ti was not detected. In contrast, [4]Ti is important in the most polymerized glasses (rhyolites and tektites) (from 30 to 60% of the total Ti depending on NBO/T) with [6]Ti below the detection level (≈10 at%). The local structure around Ti in the natural volcanic glasses is similar to that observed in compositionally similar synthetic silicate glasses and also in Ti-bearing silicate glass and melts with simpler compositions. The presence of F, Cl, and H 2O does not appear to affect the coordination of Ti, based on Ti K-edge XANES measurements of natural glasses bearing these volatile components. In contrast, the presence of nonbridging oxygens (produced by network modifiers) favors [5]Ti in these glass/melts. In parallel, [4]Ti is important when nonbridging oxygens are at small concentrations (NBO/T < 0.1). [6]Ti is detected (i.e., when present >10% of the total Ti) when alkaline-earths are dominant over alkalis, in agreement with bond-valence predictions for Ti-bearing silicate glass/melts below TiO 2 saturation. The abundance of [5]Ti in these silicate glasses (and presumably their melts) is in sharp contrast with the rarity of this Ti coordination state in common rock-forming minerals. Titanium cannot readily enter the structure of most rock-forming minerals, because it is present dominantly as titanyl-bearing ( [5]TiO) units in most natural magmas. In contrast, [6]Ti and [4]Ti (present, respectively, in basic and acidic magmas) are better able to enter inosilicates, but these coordination states represent only a fraction of the Ti in basalts, explaining the usually moderate level of incompatibility of Ti during magmatic differentiation. Finally, [5]Ti transforms to [6]Ti during crystallization of Ti-rich minerals (ilmenite, rutile, pyrochlore).
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