Condensation in Dust-enriched Systems, by D.S. Ebel and L. Grossman,
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 1999

Discussion: Stability of Silicate Liquid in Solar Gas

The calculations show that no liquids are stable in a gas of solar composition, even at a total pressure as high as 10-3 bar. Any liquids formed by the partial or complete melting of agglomerated solids (Whipple, 1966; Lofgren, 1996) would therefore be highly unstable with respect to partial evaporation in a solar nebula of canonical composition, and would become even more unstable with decreasing pressure. Such liquids would lose FeO and alkali metals most readily, followed by Mg and Si, then Ca and Al with increasing temperature.
Experimentally determined evaporation rates of Na2O from liquids of chondrule composition (Radomsky and Hewins, 1990; Tsuchiyama et al., 1981; Yu and Hewins, 1998) show that Na loss is faster at lower total pressures and lower fO2. However, Lewis et al. (1993) showed that sodium loss in alkali olivine basalt melt droplets (3.05 wt% Na2O) was nearly attenuated upon heating above 1600K at Ptot=1 bar, at the iron-wüstite buffer in a CO/CO2 + NaCl vapor with PNa > 4x10-6 atm. The present calculations show that these conditions are roughly equivalent to a C1 dust enrichment factor well in excess of 1000x at 10-3 bar. Lewis et al. (1993), based on their experiments and following Wood (1984), suggested chondrule formation in 'clumps' where the local partial pressures of condensable elements and oxygen were enhanced by volatilization of chondrule precursor material. The phase diagrams presented above provide the rigorous thermochemical basis for concluding that such a mechanism would indeed stabilize liquids in the solar nebula and reduce or eliminate the driving force for volatilization of Na and other elements from chondrule-like liquids.


CONDENSATION
in
DUST-ENRICHED SYSTEMS


Denton S. Ebel (1)

Lawrence Grossman(1,2)

(1) Department of The Geophysical Sciences
The University of Chicago
5734 South Ellis Ave.
Chicago, IL 60637

(2) Enrico Fermi Institute
The University of Chicago
5640 South Ellis Ave.
Chicago, IL 60637

Submitted December 22, 1998 to

Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta

Revised version submitted June 30, 1999
Abstract Introduction
Technique

Bulk Composition
Method of Calculation
Data for Elements and Gas Species
Data and Models for Solids
Data and Models for Silicate Liquids
Test of MELTS: Peridotite KLB-1
Transition Between Liquid Models
Results

Vapor of Solar Composition
General Effects of Dust Enrichment and Total Pressure
Oxygen Fugacity
Condensation Temperatures and Liquid Stability
Condensation at 100x Dust Enrichment, Ptot=10-3bar
Condensation at 1000x Dust Enrichment, Ptot=10-3bar
Condensation of Oxidized Iron at High Temperature
Bulk Chemical Composition of Condensates
Composition of Silicate Liquid
Composition of Spinel
Composition of Clinopyroxene
Composition of Feldspar
Composition of Metallic Nickel-Iron
Metal-Sulfide Condensate Assemblages
Discussion

Stability of Silicate Liquid in Solar Gas
Chondrules in Dust-enriched Systems
Conclusions References