4.7 Article

Laboratory calibration of the calcium carbonate clumped isotope thermometer in the 25-250 °C temperature range

Journal

GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA
Volume 157, Issue -, Pages 213-227

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2015.02.028

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Qatar Carbonates and Carbon Storage Research Centre (QCCSRC)
  2. Heidelberg Graduate School of Fundamental Physics
  3. Qatar Petroleum, Shell, and Qatar Science and Technology Park

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Many fields of Earth sciences benefit from the knowledge of mineral formation temperatures. For example, carbonates are extensively used for reconstruction of the Earth's past climatic variations by determining ocean, lake, and soil paleotemperatures. Furthermore, diagenetic minerals and their formation or alteration temperature may provide information about the burial history of important geological units and can have practical applications, for instance, for reconstructing the geochemical and thermal histories of hydrocarbon reservoirs. Carbonate clumped isotope thermometry is a relatively new technique that can provide the formation temperature of carbonate minerals without requiring a priori knowledge of the isotopic composition of the initial solution. It is based on the temperature-dependent abundance of the rare C-13-O-18 bonds in carbonate minerals, specified as a Delta(47) value. The clumped isotope thermometer has been calibrated experimentally from 1 degrees C to 70 degrees C. However, higher temperatures that are relevant to geological processes have so far not been directly calibrated in the laboratory. In order to close this calibration gap and to provide a robust basis for the application of clumped isotopes to high-temperature geological processes we precipitated CaCO3 (mainly calcite) in the laboratory between 23 and 250 degrees C. We used two different precipitation techniques: first, minerals were precipitated from a CaCO3 supersaturated solution at atmospheric pressure (23-91 degrees C), and, second, from a solution resulting from the mixing of CaCl2 and NaHCO3 in a pressurized reaction vessel at a pressure of up to 80 bar (25-250 degrees C). The calibration lines of both experimental approaches overlap and agree in the slopes with theoretical estimates and with other calibration experiments in which carbonates were reacted with phosphoric acid at temperatures above 70 degrees C. Our study suggests a universal Delta(47)-T calibration (T in K, Delta(47) in parts per thousand): Delta(47) = 0.98(+/- 0.01) . (-3.407.10(9)/T-4 + 2.365.10(7)/T-3 -2.607 . 10(3)/T-2 -5.880/T) + 0.293(+/- 0.004) This new Delta(47)-T calibration (given in the absolute reference frame), that extends the experimentally calibrated temperature range for clumped isotopes to 250 degrees C, can be applied to carbonates that grew at intermediate temperatures (20-250 degrees C). (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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