Abstract

This paper presents new experimental data on the tracer diffusion rates of U and Th in diopside at 1 atm and 1150–1300°C. Diffusion couples were prepared by depositing a thin layer of U–Th oxide onto the polished surface of a natural diopside single crystal, and diffusion profiles were measured by ion microprobe depth profiling. For diffusion parallel to [001] the following Arrhenius relations were obtained: log 10D U =(−5.75±0.98)−(418±28 kJ/mol)/2.303RT log 10D Th =(−7.77±0.92)−(356±26 kJ/mol)/2.303RT . The diffusion data are used to assess the extent to which equilibrium is obtained during near fractional melting of a high-Ca pyroxene bearing mantle peridotite. We find that the diffusion rates for both elements are slow and that disequilibrium between solid and melt will occur under certain melting conditions. For near-fractional adiabatic decompression melting at ascent rates >3 cm/yr, high-Ca pyroxene will exhibit disequilibrium effects. High-Ca pyroxene will become zoned in U and Th and the melts extracted will be depleted in these incompatible elements relative to melts produced by equilibrium fractional melting. U and Th diffusivities in high-Ca pyroxene are similar, and diffusive fractionation of these elements will be limited. Numerical solutions to a dynamic melting model with diffusion-controlled chemical equilibration indicate that the activity ratio [ 230Th/ 238U] in a partial melt of spinel peridotite will be slightly less than 1 for a broad range of melting parameters. This result reinforces the already widely accepted conclusion that melting of spinel peridotite cannot account for 230Th excesses in mid-ocean ridge and ocean island basalts, and that garnet must therefore be present over part of the melting column.

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