The Feedback Between Volatiles and Mantle Dynamics

Lead Research Organisation: University of Liverpool
Department Name: Earth, Ocean and Ecological Sciences

Abstract

In 2011, NERC began a scoping exercise to develop a research programme based around deep Earth controls on the habitable planet. The result of this exercise was for NERC to commit substantial funding to support a programme entitled "Volatiles, Geodynamics and Solid Earth Controls on the Habitable Planet". This proposal is a direct response to that call.

It is widely and generally accepted that volatiles - in particular water - strongly affect the properties that control the flow of rocks and minerals (their rheological properties). Indeed, experiments on low-pressure minerals such as quartz and olivine show that even small amounts of water can weaken a mineral - allowing it to flow faster - by as much as several orders of magnitude. This effect is known as hydrolytic weakening, and has been used to explain a wide range of fundamental Earth questions - including the origin of plate tectonics and why Earth and Venus are different.

The effect of water and volatiles on the properties of mantle rocks and minerals is a central component of this NERC research programme. Indeed it forms the basis for one of the three main questions posed by the UK academic community, and supported by a number of international experts during the scoping process. The question is "What are the feedbacks between volatile fluxes and mantle convection through time?"

Intuitively, one expects feedbacks between volatiles and mantle convection. For instance, one might envisage a scenario whereby the more water is subducted into the lower mantle, the more the mantle should weaken, allowing faster convection, which in turn results in even more water passing into the lower mantle, and so on. Of course this is a simplification since faster convection cools the mantle, slowing convection, and also increases the amount of volatiles removed from the mantle at mid-ocean ridges. Nevertheless, one can imagine many important feedbacks, some of which have been examined via simple models. In particular these models indicate a feedback between volatiles and convection that controls the distribution of water between the oceans and the mantle, and the amount topography created by the vertical movement of the mantle (known as dynamic topography). The scientists involved in the scoping exercise recognized this as a major scientific question, and one having potentially far reaching consequences for the Earth's surface and habitability.

However, as is discussed in detail in the proposal, our understanding of how mantle rocks deform as a function of water content is remarkably limited, and in fact the effect of water on the majority of mantle minerals has never been measured. The effect of water on the flow properties of most mantle minerals is simply inferred from experiments on low-pressure minerals (olivine, pyroxenes and quartz). As argued in the proposal, one cannot simply extrapolate between different minerals and rocks because different minerals may react quite differently to water. Moreover, current research is now calling into question even the experimental results on olivine, making the issue even more pressing.

We propose, therefore, a comprehensive campaign to quantify the effect of water on the rheological properties of all the major mantle minerals and rocks using a combination of new experiments and multi-physics simulation. In conjunction with 3D mantle convection models, this information will allow us to understand how the feedback between volatiles and mantle convection impacts on problems of Earth habitability, such as how ocean volumes and large-scale dynamic topography vary over time. This research thus addresses the aims and ambitions of the research programme head on, and indeed, is required for the success of the entire programme.

Planned Impact

Impact Summary

Impact will be organized though a separate Programme Grant to be submitted after the decision on the successful consortia is taken. Following the NERC guidelines, we therefore simply suggest here various avenues for impact which may be combined into a single cross-consortia Impact Plan. These ideas are:

a) An outreach bus similar to the GeoBus run out of the University of St. Andrews. This bus is available to visit all secondary schools in Scotland. We suggest a slightly different emphasis and to target primary schools. This is often the age at which children become enthused by science, and moreover, primary schools almost never have a dedicated science space.

b) Employing an outreach officer to develop undergraduate modules whereby undergraduates spend a significant amount of time in primary schools. This exposes primary school age children to enthusiastic science undergraduates, while also offering undergraduates with an early taste of teaching in schools. This is modeled after a successful program currently being run at the University of Durham.

c) Further develop and liaise with industry contacts (Rolls Royce, Superform, etc) to identify specific problems in manufacturing and metallurgy research where the developments and insights from this proposal can have practical applications.

d) Develop plans with BHP-Biliton to understand the properties of ore-forming fluids.

e) Engage with industry to investigate the transport properties of high-pressure perovskites for possible industrial uses (e.g. solid-oxide fuel cells, catalytic membranes, etc).

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description 1) Our goal is to understand how water influences the physical properties of Earth's deep interior. To achieve this goal, we are carrying out experiments on olivine under high-pressure and high-temperature conditions and measuring its flow behavior and microstrucutre when deformed under either anhydrous (water-free) or hydrous (water-rich) conditions. Analyses of mechanical data from our experiments have yielded valuable constitutive equations that describe how olivine deforms at different conditions. Analysis of post-deformation samples from our experiments has revealed that important processes, including recrystallization and development of lattice-preferred orientation, are influenced by water. Importantly, our experiments suggest that (1) the water-weakening phenomenon in olivine is independent of orientation, meaning all of the dislocation slip systems weaken similarly with the addition of water, and (2) that recrystallization is much more active when deformation occurs in the presence of water. The results of our study will have direct application to models of the movement of Earth's tectonic plates as well as interpretation of seismic measurements related to understanding the nature of Earth's interior.

2) We used NanoSIMS to measure deuterium concentrations along grain interfaces in nominally an hydrous mantle rocks. Our results are consistent with a partition coefficient of hydrogen between grain interfaces and lattices of olivine and orthopyroxene aggregates of less than or equal to 62, which is much lower than previous measurements carried out using FTIR. Extrapolation of these results to mantle grain sizes suggests that water stored in grain interfaces is unlikely to contribute to the global water budget of the mantles of terrestrial planets but may be the primary storage site in the fine-grained lithospheric shear zones.
3) This is a development of 2): It has become clear that many of the boundaries we analysed contained a melt fraction, therefore we had to re-think the meaning of the dataset. we currently have a manuscript in draft version which explain.s some of the observations, but 3 lockdowns and covid restrictions have meant that access to further SIMS data collection or running further experiments was not possible
Exploitation Route The field of numerical modeling of physical properties of the earth is growing rapidly. Specifically, models that coupling the mechanical properties and development of lattice-preferred orientation in olivine-rich rocks have become increasingly more complex. These models, which are important for imaging Earth's interoir as well as modeling how Earth's tectonic plates move relative to each other, require precise laboratory measurements of olivine. Our results can be directly used in these models and can greatly enhance their accuracy and therefore allow for confident extrapolation in space and time that would otherwise be impossible.
Sectors Aerospace, Defence and Marine,Chemicals,Construction,Education,Energy,Environment,Manufacturing, including Industrial Biotechology,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections,Transport

 
Title High-Temperature and High-Pressure deformation aparatus 
Description This is an apparatus that can typically reach temperatures of 1573K and confining pressures of 300 MPa. Argon gas is the fining medium. Measurements of force can be made inside the pressure vessel - allowing for precise measurements of stress, typically with error less than 5 MPa. Deformation can be carried out in compression or torsion. This is the only apparatus capable of making measurements at these conditions and with this degree of precision in the United Kingdom. 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact This aparatus has allowed us to carry out experiments, and therefore to measure the physical properties of materials, that would otherwise be impossible. 
 
Title New process for measuring water minerals 
Description We developed a new method to measuring the water content of minerals. This method involves doping common minerals at elevated temperatures and pressures in the presence of deuterium, a stable isotope of hydrogen. Deuterium behaves in a similar manner as hydrogen in the minerals, but can be measured at >3 orders of magnitude higher spatial resolution. The results of this new method have been written up and will be submitted to a high impact publication soon. 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2017 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact This new methods helps constrain the water content of Earth and other planets such as Mars. 
 
Description Deep Volatiles 
Organisation Durham University
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We bring in an experimental approach and expertise and facilities using quantitative crystallography using electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) to understanding deep Earth processes.
Collaborator Contribution High P-T experimental expertise, ab-initio modelling
Impact No outputs yet
Start Year 2014
 
Description Deep Volatiles 
Organisation Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee
Country India 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We bring in an experimental approach and expertise and facilities using quantitative crystallography using electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) to understanding deep Earth processes.
Collaborator Contribution High P-T experimental expertise, ab-initio modelling
Impact No outputs yet
Start Year 2014
 
Description Deep Volatiles 
Organisation University College London
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We bring in an experimental approach and expertise and facilities using quantitative crystallography using electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) to understanding deep Earth processes.
Collaborator Contribution High P-T experimental expertise, ab-initio modelling
Impact No outputs yet
Start Year 2014
 
Description Deep Volatiles 
Organisation University of Leeds
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We bring in an experimental approach and expertise and facilities using quantitative crystallography using electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) to understanding deep Earth processes.
Collaborator Contribution High P-T experimental expertise, ab-initio modelling
Impact No outputs yet
Start Year 2014
 
Description Deep Volatiles 
Organisation University of Manchester
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We bring in an experimental approach and expertise and facilities using quantitative crystallography using electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) to understanding deep Earth processes.
Collaborator Contribution High P-T experimental expertise, ab-initio modelling
Impact No outputs yet
Start Year 2014
 
Description Deep Volatiles 
Organisation University of Oxford
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution We bring in an experimental approach and expertise and facilities using quantitative crystallography using electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) to understanding deep Earth processes.
Collaborator Contribution High P-T experimental expertise, ab-initio modelling
Impact No outputs yet
Start Year 2014
 
Description Fe diffusion profiles in olivine grain boundaries 
Organisation Open University
Department Department of Environment, Earth and Ecosystems
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Experimental sample synthesis, sample preparation, data analysis and interpretation
Collaborator Contribution Microprobe data collection
Impact Still at data processing stage
Start Year 2020
 
Description Grain scale distribution of water in mantle materials characterised by nanoSIMS 
Organisation University of Manchester
Department School of Materials Manchester
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Sample synthesis and preparation, analysis and interpretation of results
Collaborator Contribution Nanoscale secondary ion mass spectrometry data collection
Impact Manuscript "Grain interfaces store small amounts of water in the interiors of terrestrial planets" under revision
Start Year 2018