Uranium Isotope Fractionation During Coprecipitation with Aragonite and Calcite
abstract: Natural variations in 238U/235U of marine carbonates might provide a useful way of constraining redox conditions of ancient environments. In order to evaluate the reliability of this proxy, we conducted aragonite and calcite coprecipitation experiments at pH ~7.5 and ~ 8.5 to study possibl...
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ndltd-asu.edu-item-348972018-06-22T03:06:36Z Uranium Isotope Fractionation During Coprecipitation with Aragonite and Calcite abstract: Natural variations in 238U/235U of marine carbonates might provide a useful way of constraining redox conditions of ancient environments. In order to evaluate the reliability of this proxy, we conducted aragonite and calcite coprecipitation experiments at pH ~7.5 and ~ 8.5 to study possible U isotope fractionation during incorporation into these minerals. Small but significant U isotope fractionation was observed in aragonite experiments at pH ~ 8.5, with heavier U in the solid phase. 238U/235U of dissolved U in these experiments can be fit by Rayleigh fractionation curves with fractionation factors of 1.00007+0.00002/-0.00003, 1.00005 ± 0.00001, and 1.00003 ± 0.00001. In contrast, no resolvable U isotope fractionation was observed in an aragonite experiment at pH ~7.5 or in calcite experiments at either pH. Equilibrium isotope fractionation among different aqueous U species is the most likely explanation for these findings. Certain charged U species are preferentially incorporated into calcium carbonate relative to the uncharged U species Ca2UO2(CO3)3(aq), which we hypothesize has a lighter equilibrium U isotope composition than most of the charged species. According to this hypothesis, the magnitude of U isotope fractionation should scale with the fraction of dissolved U that is present as Ca2UO2(CO3)3 (aq). This expectation is confirmed by equilibrium speciation modeling of our experiments. Theoretical calculation of the U isotope fractionation factors between different U species could further test this hypothesis and our proposed fractionation mechanism. These findings suggest that U isotope variations in ancient carbonates could be controlled by changes in the aqueous speciation of seawater U, particularly changes in seawater pH, PCO2, [Ca], or [Mg] concentrations. In general, these effects are likely to be small (<0.13 ‰), but are nevertheless potentially significant because of the small natural range of variation of 238U/235U. Dissertation/Thesis Chen, Xinming (Author) Anbar, Ariel (Advisor) Herckes, Pierre (Committee member) Shock, Everett (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Chemistry Geochemistry Aragonite Calcite Isotope fractionation Uranium eng 71 pages Masters Thesis Chemistry 2015 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.34897 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015 |
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English |
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Dissertation |
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Chemistry Geochemistry Aragonite Calcite Isotope fractionation Uranium |
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Chemistry Geochemistry Aragonite Calcite Isotope fractionation Uranium Uranium Isotope Fractionation During Coprecipitation with Aragonite and Calcite |
description |
abstract: Natural variations in 238U/235U of marine carbonates might provide a useful way of constraining redox conditions of ancient environments. In order to evaluate the reliability of this proxy, we conducted aragonite and calcite coprecipitation experiments at pH ~7.5 and ~ 8.5 to study possible U isotope fractionation during incorporation into these minerals.
Small but significant U isotope fractionation was observed in aragonite experiments at pH ~ 8.5, with heavier U in the solid phase. 238U/235U of dissolved U in these experiments can be fit by Rayleigh fractionation curves with fractionation factors of 1.00007+0.00002/-0.00003, 1.00005 ± 0.00001, and 1.00003 ± 0.00001. In contrast, no resolvable U isotope fractionation was observed in an aragonite experiment at pH ~7.5 or in calcite experiments at either pH. Equilibrium isotope fractionation among different aqueous U species is the most likely explanation for these findings. Certain charged U species are preferentially incorporated into calcium carbonate relative to the uncharged U species Ca2UO2(CO3)3(aq), which we hypothesize has a lighter equilibrium U isotope composition than most of the charged species. According to this hypothesis, the magnitude of U isotope fractionation should scale with the fraction of dissolved U that is present as Ca2UO2(CO3)3 (aq). This expectation is confirmed by equilibrium speciation modeling of our experiments. Theoretical calculation of the U isotope fractionation factors between different U species could further test this hypothesis and our proposed fractionation mechanism.
These findings suggest that U isotope variations in ancient carbonates could be controlled by changes in the aqueous speciation of seawater U, particularly changes in seawater pH, PCO2, [Ca], or [Mg] concentrations. In general, these effects are likely to be small (<0.13 ‰), but are nevertheless potentially significant because of the small natural range of variation of 238U/235U. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis Chemistry 2015 |
author2 |
Chen, Xinming (Author) |
author_facet |
Chen, Xinming (Author) |
title |
Uranium Isotope Fractionation During Coprecipitation with Aragonite and Calcite |
title_short |
Uranium Isotope Fractionation During Coprecipitation with Aragonite and Calcite |
title_full |
Uranium Isotope Fractionation During Coprecipitation with Aragonite and Calcite |
title_fullStr |
Uranium Isotope Fractionation During Coprecipitation with Aragonite and Calcite |
title_full_unstemmed |
Uranium Isotope Fractionation During Coprecipitation with Aragonite and Calcite |
title_sort |
uranium isotope fractionation during coprecipitation with aragonite and calcite |
publishDate |
2015 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.34897 |
_version_ |
1718700886091366400 |