Isotopic and elemental distribution of copper between Cu-bearing minerals and aqueous fluids : implications of an experimental study

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dc.identifier.uri http://dx.doi.org/10.15488/4318
dc.identifier.uri https://www.repo.uni-hannover.de/handle/123456789/4352
dc.contributor.author Qi, Dongmei ger
dc.date.accessioned 2019-01-21T10:09:41Z
dc.date.available 2019-01-21T10:09:41Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.citation Qi, Dongmei: Isotopic and elemental distribution of copper between Cu-bearing minerals and aqueous fluids : implications of an experimental study. Hannover : Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Universität, Diss., 2018, 154 S. DOI: https://doi.org/10.15488/4318 ger
dc.description.abstract Transport and deposition of copper in the Earth’s crust are mainly controlled by the speciation of Cu and solubility of Cu-bearing phases in magmatic-hydrothermal fluids. In order to improve our understanding of mobilization of copper by hydrothermal fluids, we conducted experiments with Cu-bearing phases (metallic copper, Cu2O, CuCl) and aqueous solutions (H2O, NaClaq, KClaq, HCl, acetate solutions with/without pH buffer) at 25°C-800°C and 0.1 -200 MPa. The high temperature and high pressure (i.e., 800°C and 200 MPa) experiments were conducted in rapid heat/rapid quench argon cold seal pressure vessel using the synthetic fluid inclusion technique. The experimental charges Cu2Os ± CuCls + H2O ± NaClaq ± HClaq (chloride concentration: 0 to 4.3 mol/kg) were loaded in either Cu or Au capsules. Two types of quartz cylinders were used to trap in-situ hydrothermal fluids: (i) pre-cracked and (ii) intact prior to experiment. Fluid composition was subsequently determined by analyzing individual fluid inclusions using laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry. Two types of inclusions, i.e., fluid inclusion and Na-bearing silicate melt inclusion, have been formed exclusively in metallic Cu-NaCl system. Moreover, micron- to submicron-sized cuprite has been observed in both types of inclusions. In HCl±CuCl-bearing systems, fluid inclusion trapping potential nantokite (CuCl) is observed. The Cu content is strongly enhanced by initial chloride content, and can reach up to 4.3 wt% and 11 wt% in 4.3 m NaCl and 1.9 m HCl solutions, respectively. Fast cooling which is avoided by most researchers shows advantages of preservation of ample inclusions in Cu-NaCl system. In addition, the fluid inclusions after rapid quench (25 K/s) yields much smaller variation of Cu content in comparison to the usually favored slow quench process (0.5 K/s). The H-D exchange experiment demonstrates that only H2O is present in isolated, isometric inclusions whereas D2O has been measured in necking-down inclusions, implying isolated (and isometric) inclusions are well sealed and are representative of fluid present at run conditions. This study confirms that synthetic fluid inclusion is an effective method to preserve in situ hydrothermal fluid at high P-T conditions. Two coexisting phases, i.e. hydrothermal brine and silica-rich melt phases, may be responsible for Cu transport and enrichment. The moderate temperature and pressure (100-250°C, 5-30 MPa) experiments were conducted in a Parr autoclave allowing for in-situ sampling of liquid phase. The partitioning of Cu between cuprite and hydrothermal fluids (KClaq, H2O, pH buffered KClaq and H2O, where pH buffer refers to 0.2 m HAc/KAc) has been investigated from two aspects: Cu concentration and isotope fractionation. Experimental products are native copper and tenorite. Native copper is formed at 250°C and occurs in H2O and KCl-bearing runs and short-termed (≤24 hours) acetate-bearing runs. Tenorite formed in 150°C and 250°C long-termed (72 hours) acetate-bearing runs. Four competing reactions control the Cu partitioning, i.e., cuprite dissolution, Cu(I) disproportionation into Cu(II) and native Cu, decomposition of acetate into methane and carbon dioxide and oxidation of dissolved Cu(I) to Cu(II). It is worth noting that the last reaction exclusively occurs in Cu2O-acetate systems. During the cuprite dissolution stage (<~6 hours), Cu content in pH buffered solution is by an order of magnitude higher than that without. In pH buffered solutions: (i) Cu content in KCl solutions is up to two orders magnitude higher than that of acetate solutions; (ii) temperature and salinity can significantly affect Cu content, whereas the effect of pressure is insignificant. The subsequent coupled Cu(I) disproportionation and acetate decarboxylation processes result in a reduction of dissolved Cu. Conjointly, the resulting isotope fractionation is 0.10±0.10‰ (Δ65Cu [Cu(0)-Cu(I)]). The oxidation substantially increases Δ65Cu Cu(II)O-Cu(I) to 0.35±0.05‰. The low temperature-pressure (5-80°C, 0.1 MPa) experiments were conducted to get insights into the mechanisms of isotope fractionations induced by reduction processes (Cu2+ + 2e- = Cu0). All experiments have been conducted in aqueous CuSO4 solutions using Cu electroplating method. In all cases, the plated Cu metal is enriched in the light isotope (63Cu) with respect to the solution. At room temperature the Cu isotopic fractionation between the electroplated Cu and electrolyte is found to increase with electrolyte concentration and stirring speed, and to decrease with current and run duration. These trends can be explained by three competing processes: copper transport in the solution, the kinetics of electrochemical reduction of copper ions and the surface diffusion at the electrode, i.e., transport becomes important at low copper concentration, low stirring speed, high currents and large amount of copper precipitation. Copper isotope fractionation has a maximum (Δ65Cu = -2.66±0.02‰) near 35°C, decreasing both towards higher and lower temperatures. Our findings in comparison to other studies imply that transformation of fivefold to sixfold coordinated aquacomplexes of Cu2+ to linear Cu+ complexes is a key step during reduction of copper in aqueous solutions, inducing large negative copper isotope fractionation. These findings support that copper isotopes can be used as effective tracers of redox processes. This may have implications to various hydrothermal ore deposits, such as supergene processes, black smokers and volcanic-hosted massive sulfide. ger
dc.language.iso eng ger
dc.publisher Hannover : Institutionelles Repositorium der Leibniz Universität Hannover
dc.rights Es gilt deutsches Urheberrecht. Das Dokument darf zum eigenen Gebrauch kostenfrei genutzt, aber nicht im Internet bereitgestellt oder an Außenstehende weitergegeben werden. ger
dc.subject native Cu eng
dc.subject cuprite eng
dc.subject tenorite eng
dc.subject synthetic fluid inclusions eng
dc.subject silicate melt inclusions eng
dc.subject Cu solubility in aqueous fluids eng
dc.subject Cu isotopes eng
dc.subject disproportionation eng
dc.subject decarboxylation eng
dc.subject electrochemical reduction eng
dc.subject thermodynamic equilibrium eng
dc.subject kinetics eng
dc.subject Gediegenes Cu ger
dc.subject Cuprit ger
dc.subject Tenorit ger
dc.subject Nantokite ger
dc.subject synthetische Fluideinschlüsse ger
dc.subject silikatische Schmelzeinschlüsse ger
dc.subject Kupferlöslichkeit in wässrigen Lösungen ger
dc.subject Kupferisotope ger
dc.subject Disproportionierung ger
dc.subject Decarboxylierung ger
dc.subject Oxidation ger
dc.subject elektrochemische Reduktion ger
dc.subject thermodynamisches Equilibrium ger
dc.subject Kinetik ger
dc.subject.ddc 550 | Geowissenschaften ger
dc.title Isotopic and elemental distribution of copper between Cu-bearing minerals and aqueous fluids : implications of an experimental study eng
dc.type DoctoralThesis ger
dc.type Text ger
dcterms.extent 154 S.
dc.description.version publishedVersion ger
tib.accessRights frei zug�nglich ger


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