학술논문

Importance of fluid immiscibility in the H2O-NaCl-CO2 system and selective CO2 entrapment in granulites; experimental phase diagram at 5-7 kbar, 900°C and wetting textures
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
European Journal of Mineralogy. 10(6):1109-1123
Subject
05A|Petrology - igneous and metamorphic rocks
carbon dioxide
facies
fluid inclusions
granulite facies
granulites
high pressure
immiscibility
inclusions
metamorphic rocks
P-T conditions
phase equilibria
polycrystalline materials
pressure
wet methods
Language
English
ISSN
0935-1221
Abstract
New experimental data on fluid immiscibility in the H2O-NaCl-CO2 system at 900°C and 5-7 kbar have been obtained using the synthetic fluid-inclusion technique. The main result is a significant enlargement of the immiscibility field as pressure decreases from 7 to 5 kbar. Combined with previous data, our experiments show that immiscibility is probably a widespread phenomenon in low-pressure granulite-facies rocks. Because CO2-rich fluids and NaCl-rich aqueous fluids have very contrasting wetting behaviour, fluid unmixing could result in a selective entrapment of the CO2-rich component in granulites (Watson & Brenan, 1987). To check this hypothesis, we performed an experiment in which polycrystalline quartz was heat-treated in the presence of small volume percentages of the two immiscible fluids. The observed pore geometry is characterized by a combination of large, isolated CO2-rich bubbles, and an interconnected network of NaCl-H2O-filled channels along quartz edges. A model combining unmixing and the subsequent escape of the aqueous fluid by porous flow could therefore explain the CO2-rich fluid inclusions in low-pressure granulites.