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1 Department of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Wills Memorial Building, Queens Road, Bristol BS8 1RJ, U.K.
2 Institute for Mineralogy and Petrography, ETH Zurich, Sonneggstrasse 5, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland
Correspondence: * E-mail: george{at}geology.bristol.ac.uk
| ABSTRACT |
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Key Words: Thermodynamics equation of state properties phase equilibria calculation high-pressure studies expansivity measurements negative expansivity
| INTRODUCTION |
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![]() | (1) |
where the first integral involving volume (V) is done isothermally and the second involving entropy (S), isobarically. Due to the wealth of 1 bar thermophysical property measurements, the T integral is usually done at Pr = 1 bar. This requires the P integral to be done at T. Consequently, there is a need for V(T) at 1 bar, as well as volume equation of state parameters usable at high T.
For fixed bulk composition, equilibrium calculations are based on the scalar function G(P,T). Once G is calculated, the stable phase assemblage may be found by minimizing G subject to the bulk composition constraint. At that point, both the constituent mineral properties and the system properties may be found from G using various thermodynamic identities. For example, because V is (
G/
P)T, numerical or analytic derivatives of G yield the volumes. Of especial interest in this family of properties is the thermal expansivity,
= (1/V)(
V/
T)P, which may be obtained from phase or system properties via
![]() | (2) |
This represents the high-pressure and -temperature expansivity. Continuum theories of material behavior posit a positive-definite strain energy function to define material mechanical stability. The strain tensor, Eij, includes a thermal component through
![]() | (3) |
and also depends on the material parameters Poissons ratio
, Youngs modulus E, and stress tensor
ij (
ij is the Kronecker delta symbol). The work dW done by straining a material is (Malvern 1969)
![]() | (4) |
If
were negative at any pressure, thermal energy added to the substance would derive work from it. One could alternatively say that adiabatic compression of the material would cool it: planetary interiors could be colder than their surfaces in absent internal heat sources. This is non-geophysical behavior, though some substances exhibit negative
due to geometric peculiarities at low pressures and temperatures (Pryde et al. 1996).
We show that this form of non-physical behavior can arise if the thermal part of the volume equation of state is not integrated properly with the compression part of the equation of state. Examples and a straightforward remedy based on an observationally justified approximation to simultaneous high-P and -T mineral behavior follow.
| PROBLEM STATEMENT |
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![]() | (5) |
where S/T denotes either adiabatic or isothermal conditions as appropriate. This definition itself constitutes a simple, but not very good, volume EOS by integration assuming constant bulk modulus, K. The Murnaghan and Birch-Murnaghan EOSs are successive refinements to the constant bulk modulus approximation. The Murnaghan EOS adopts the reasonable physical assumption that squeezed material resists more squeezing due to increased repulsive forces between the atoms comprising a substance. Thus KT increases linearly with pressure with scale factor K' = dKT/dP. The Birch-Murnaghan EOS elaborates on the same idea using finite strain to better account for high compressions at high P.
Both EOSs are typically isothermal. From Poirier (1991) Equation 4.7,
![]() | (6) |
Adding the thermal component to Vr and KT and neglecting the effect of temperature on K', which is small (Anderson and Isaak 1993), yields
![]() | (6') |
An obvious parameterization of KT(T) is to assume it declines linearly, with constant dKT/dT, as theory and laboratory observations suggest (Born and Huang 1954; Isaak et al. 1998), and as many compilations employ (Fei and Saxena 1990; Sobolev and Babeyko 1994; Gerya et al. 2004; Mattern et al. 2005). Taking the high-pressure temperature derivative of Equation 6' as specified by Equation 2,
![]() | (7) |
We seek a zero to this expression to show that, at some point, the EOS leads to negative
. Setting the left-hand side to zero, noting that V(T) is strictly positive and that
![]() |
is also strictly positive when KT (T) > 0, this simplifies to
![]() | (8) |
Solving for the pressure Pz when
is zero (going negative)
![]() | (9) |
For insight into the severity of the problem, take
to be a constant
0. (dKT)/(dT) will be strictly negative, so the requirement that P be positive leads to
![]() | (10) |
For
0K'
10–4 K–1, KT
106 bars, a negative
is virtually guaranteed for typical (dKT)/(dT) values, which are usually a few hundred bars/K (Holland and Powell 1998).
A similar treatment may be applied to the Birch-Murnaghan equation, but with more algebraic work and less insight. The isothermal Birch-Murnaghan equation is (Poirier 1991, Eq. 4.41)
![]() | (11) |
The finite strain f = 1/2[(Vr /V)2/3 – 1] and
= 3(K' – 4)/4. Adding polythermal behavior explicitly,
![]() | (11') |
with f now denoting finite strain relative to V(T). Evaluating the desired derivative by chain rule yields
![]() | (12) |
which requires only an expression for dP/dT. Using the results (not derived for brevity) that df/dV = – (1 + 2f)/(3V) and df/dT = (df/dV)(dV/dT) = 2
(1 + 2f)/3, we write
![]() | (13) |
Substituting Equation 13 into Equation 12 yields the desired expression
![]() | (14) |
Setting the left-hand side to zero and solving for Pz, and dividing out the always positive V yields the pressure at which the thermal expansivity becomes zero:
![]() | (15) |
for mantle strains, where f
0.1. For dKT/dT
–2 x 102 bars/K,
3 x 10–5 K–1 and KT
106 bars,
becomes zero at about 30 GPa, a planetary pressure range plausibly encountered in phase equilibrium calculations.
| ALTERNATIVE PARAMETERIZATION |
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arises due to the constant negative dKT/dT. An alternative bulk modulus thermal dependence comes from the Anderson-Grüneisen parameter, defined as
![]() | (16) |
and is approximately a constant (Anderson and Isaak 1993). For a quasiharmonic parameter q = 1, Anderson and Isaak (1993) find that
T = K, and that
has no dependence on compression. This approximation may be usefully combined with the Murnaghan equation for a simple equation of state good for pressures to mid-Earth conditions when strains exceed the Murnaghan equations applicability. Rather than KT(T) = KT0 + (dKT/dT)(T – Tr), use Equation 16 to infer that
![]() | (17) |
showing that KT decays exponentially with T at a rate proportional to the volumetric expansion of the mineral with T. This in turn suggests that the instantaneous dKT/dT is always negative but approaches zero at high T. Also of service is another relation that follows from the definition of
T,
![]() | (18) |
Proceeding as before to examine the possibility of
(P,T) becoming negative, form an expression for
V/
T at high pressure:
![]() | (19) |
We seek a zero to this expression to show that at some point the EOS leads to negative
. Setting the left-hand side to zero, noting that V(T) and zero pressure
are strictly positive, and also noting that
![]() |
is strictly positive, this simplifies to
![]() | (20) |
Solving for Pz where
(P,T) equals zero,
![]() | (21) |
which rearranges as
![]() | (22) |
If
T = K' as initially assumed, at no finite pressure will
(P,T) be zero. For brevity, we call this the modified Murnaghan EOS.
Because a good approximation to
T is already available in thermodynamic compilations, either through explicit tabulation (Fei and Saxena 1990; Sobolev and Babeyko 1990; Gerya et al. 2004; Helffrich and Kaneshima 2004; Mattern et al. 2005) or assuming that for all substances K'
4 (Holland and Powell 1998), whence
T
4, one can employ the modified Murnaghan EOS without change to existing mineral thermophysical property compilations. If
T is available and exceeds KT, the difference is unlikely to exceed unity (Anderson et al. 1992). Thus Pz will be on the order of KT, ~106 bars, a pressure that invalidates Murnaghan EOS use.
As a concrete example, Figure 1
shows phase equilibria for the system K2O-Al2O3-SiO2 at high pressures calculated using the Murnaghan and the modified Murnaghan EOS. Yong et al. (2006) refined the thermodynamic data for the phases K-hollandite and Si-wadeite that we show calculated with the Perple_X program (Connolly 2005). Thermophysical data relevant to phase volumetric properties are listed in Table 1
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(P,T) onset at 1300 K is 8.1 GPa, the range of significant divergence shown in the figure. In the Holland and Powell (1998) database, we found that anomalies arise for pressures <10 GPa and temperatures <2000 K for about 10% of the end-member phases. Of interest is that all SiO2 polymorphs, except stishovite, suffer from negative high-pressure thermal expansivity. | DISCUSSION |
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gT/CP; g is gravitational acceleration and CP is heat capacity) and its role in calculating seismic wavespeeds [e.g.,
VP2 = KT(1 + T
) + 4/3µ;
is the Grüneisen parameter, ~1 for most substances,
the density, and µ is the shear modulus]. We showed how a straightforward change to the thermal component of the equation of state can remedy this flaw. The virtue is that at low pressures and temperatures, the calculated results using either parameterization are indistinguishable and the method advocated here does not lead to non-physical behavior under any circumstances. This is potentially of benefit in any phase equilibrium calculation implementation.
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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| Footnotes |
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MANUSCRIPT RECEIVED March 31, 2009; MANUSCRIPT ACCEPTED July 20, 2009
| REFERENCES CITED |
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