4.7 Article

Solubility of gold in oxidized, sulfur-bearing fluids at 500-850 °C and 200-230 MPa: A synthetic fluid inclusion study

Journal

GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA
Volume 222, Issue -, Pages 655-670

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2017.11.019

Keywords

Gold solubility; Magmatic-hydrothermal fluids; Sulfur speciation; Au speciation; Experimental; LA-ICP-MS; Thermodynamic modelling; Synthetic fluid inclusions; Porphyry Cu-Au deposits

Funding

  1. China Scholarship Council (CSC) program

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Although Au solubility in magmatic-hydrothermal fluids has been investigated by numerous previous studies, there is a dearth of data on oxidized (log fO(2) > FMQ+2.5 - FMQ fayalite-magnetite-quartz buffer), sulfur-bearing fluids such as those that formed porphyry Cu-Au (-Mo) deposits. We performed experiments to constrain the effects of fluid salinity, HCl content, sulfur content, fO(2) and temperature on Au solubility in such oxidized, sulfur-bearing fluids. For this purpose, small aliquots of fluids equilibrated with Au metal were trapped at high pressure and temperature in the form of synthetic fluid inclusions in quartz and were subsequently analyzed by LA-ICP-MS. Additionally, Raman spectra were collected from quartz-hosted fluid inclusions at up to 600 degrees C to help to identify the nature of dissolved gold and sulfur species. Gold solubility was found to be affected most strongly by the HCl content of the fluid, followed by fO(2), fluid salinity and temperature. Compared to these factors the sulfur content of the fluid has relatively little influence. At 600 degrees C and 100 MPa, fluids with geologically realistic HCl contents (similar to 1.1 wt%) and salinities (7-50 wt% NaClequiv) dissolve similar to 1000-3000 ppm Au at oxygen fugacities controlled by the magnetite-hematite buffer. At even more oxidized conditions (three log units above the hematite-magnetite fO(2) buffer), HCl-, NaCl- and H2SO4-rich fluids can dissolve up to 5 wt% Au at 800 degrees C and 200 MPa. The observed Au solubility trends are controlled by HCl0 species in the Na-H-Cl-SO4 fluid and are quantitatively reproduced by existing thermodynamic data for Au-Cl complexes. In all experiments, AuCl0 and AuCl2- species are predicted to occur in comparable although variable concentrations, and account for more than 95% of Au solutes. Natural, high-temperature (>500 degrees C) brine inclusions from porphyry Cu-Au (-Mo) deposits contain significantly less Au than gold-saturated brines that were synthesized experimentally, implying that the natural brines were Au-undersaturated. Consequently, gold grades in Au-rich porphyries were not controlled by the precipitation of native Au, but rather by factors that caused the precipitation of Au-bearing hydrothermal sulfides such as bornite. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available