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The glass transition and the non-Arrhenian viscosity of carbonate melts

Authors :
Dingwell, Donald B.
Hess, Kai-Uwe
Wilding, Martin C.
Brooker, Richard A.
Di Genova, Danilo
Drewitt, James W.E.
Wilson, Mark
Weidendorfer, Daniel
Source :
American Mineralogist (De Gruyter); May 2022, Vol. 107 Issue: 6 p1053-1064, 12p
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

We report the first calorimetric observation of the glass transition for a carbonate melt. A carbonate glass [55K2CO3–45MgCO3(molar)] was quenched from 780 °C at 0.1 GPa. The activation energy of structural relaxation close to the glass transition was derived through a series of thermal treatments comprising excursions across the glass transition at different heating rates. Viscosities just above the glass transition temperature were obtained by applying a shift factor to the calorimetric results. These viscosity measurements (in the range of 109Pa·s) at supercooled temperatures (ca. 230 °C) dramatically extend the temperature range of data for carbonates, which were previously restricted to superliquidus viscosities well below 1 Pa·s. Combining our calorimetrically derived results with published alkaline-earth carbonate melt viscosities at high temperatures yields a highly non-Arrhenian viscosity-temperature relationship and confirms that carbonate liquids are “fragile.” Based on simulations, fragile behavior is also exhibited by Na2CO3melt. In both cases, the fragility presumably relates to the formation of temperature-dependent low-dimensional structures and Vogel-Fulcher-Tammann (VFT) curves adequately describe the viscosity-temperature relationships of carbonate melts below 1000 °C.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0003004X and 19453027
Volume :
107
Issue :
6
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
American Mineralogist (De Gruyter)
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs59799213
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2138/am-2021-7752