Abstract

The chemistry of bridgmanite (Brg), especially the oxidation state of iron, is important for understanding the physical and chemical properties, as well as putting constraints on the redox state, of the Earth’s lower mantle. To investigate the controls on the chemistry of Brg, the Fe3+ content of Brg was investigated experimentally as a function of composition and oxygen fugacity (fo2) at 25 GPa. The Fe3+/∑Fe ratio of Brg increases with Brg Al content and fo2 and decreases with increasing total Fe content and with temperature. The dependence of the Fe3+/∑Fe ratio on fo2 becomes less steep with increasing Al content. Thermodynamic models were calibrated to describe Brg and ferropericlase (Fp) compositions as well as the inter-site partitioning of trivalent cations in Brg in the Al–Mg–Si–O, Fe–Mg–Si–O and Fe–Al–Mg–Si–O systems. These models are based on equilibria involving Brg components where the equilibrium thermodynamic properties are the main adjustable parameters that are fit to the experimental data. The models reproduce the experimental data over wide ranges of fo2 with a relatively small number of adjustable terms. Mineral compositions for plausible mantle bulk compositions can be calculated from the models as a function of fo2 and can be extrapolated to higher pressures using data on the partial molar volumes of the Brg components. The results show that the exchange of Mg and total Fe (i.e., ferric and ferrous) between Brg and Fp is strongly fo2 dependent, which allows the results of previous studies to be reinterpreted. For a pyrolite bulk composition with an upper mantle bulk oxygen content, the fo2 at the top of the lower mantle is −0.86 log units below the iron–wüstite buffer (IW) with a Brg Fe3+/∑Fe ratio of 0.50 and a bulk rock ratio of 0.28. This requires the formation of 0.7 wt.% Fe–Ni alloy to balance the raised Brg ferric iron content. With increasing pressure, the model predicts a gradual increase in the Fe3+/∑Fe ratio in Brg in contrast to several previous studies, which levels off by 50 GPa. Oxygen vacancies in Brg decrease to practically zero by 40 GPa, potentially influencing elasticity, diffusivity and rheology in the top portion of the lower mantle. The models are also used to explore the fo2 recorded by inclusions in diamonds, which likely crystallized as Brg in the lower mantle, revealing oxygen fugacities which likely preclude the formation of some diamonds directly from carbonates, at least at the top of the lower mantle.

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