Abstract
A recent study attributed the source of an iron partitioning change between silicate melt and minerals at deep mantle conditions to a high‐spin to low‐spin change in iron, which was found in a Fe‐diluted Mg‐silicate glass at a similar pressure. We conducted X‐ray emission spectroscopy and nuclear forward scattering on iron‐rich Mg‐silicate glasses at high pressure and 300 K in the diamond‐anvil cell: Al‐free glass up to 135 GPa and Al‐bearing glass up to 93 GPa. In both glasses, the spin moment decreases gradually from 1 bar and does not reach a complete low‐spin state even at the peak pressures of this study. The gradual change may be due to the existence of diverse coordination environments for iron in the glasses and continuous structural adjustment of the disordered system with pressure. If the result can be extrapolated to iron in mantle melts, the small, gradual changes in the spin state of iron may not be the dominant factor explaining the reported sudden change in the partitioning behavior of iron between silicate melt and minerals at lower‐mantle pressures.
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