4.6 Article

Effects of depth- and composition-dependent thermal conductivity and the compositional viscosity ratio on the long-term evolution of large thermochemical piles of primordial material in the lower mantle of the Earth: Insights from 2-D numerical modeling

期刊

SCIENCE CHINA-EARTH SCIENCES
卷 66, 期 8, 页码 1865-1876

出版社

SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s11430-022-1111-6

关键词

Mantle convection; Thermal conductivity; Core-mantle boundary heat flow; Primordial mantle material; LLSVPs

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Thermal conductivity of the mantle varies with pressure and composition, and it plays a crucial role in the thermochemical evolution of the Earth's mantle. Increasing depth-dependent thermal conductivity leads to a larger core-mantle boundary heat flow and more stable thermochemical piles, while decreasing composition-dependent thermal conductivity slightly destabilizes the primordial thermochemical piles. The long-term stability of the piles decreases if the primordial mantle material is compositionally more viscous and this destabilizing effect is enhanced by decreasing composition-dependent thermal conductivity. Overall, the combined effects of depth- and composition-dependent thermal conductivity and compositional viscosity ratio significantly influence the thermochemical evolution of the mantle.
Thermal conductivity plays an important role in the thermochemical evolution of Earth's mantle. Recent mineral physics studies suggest that the thermal conductivity of the mantle varies with pressure and composition, and this may play an important role in the evolution of the Earth's mantle. Meanwhile, the rheology of the deep mantle is also supposed to be composition-dependent. However, the dynamic influences of these factors remain not well understood. In this study, we performed numerical experiments of thermochemical mantle convection in 2-D spherical annulus geometry to systematically investigate the effects of depth- and composition-dependent thermal conductivity and the compositional viscosity ratio on the long-term evolution of the large thermochemical structure of primordial material in Earth's mantle. Our results show that increasing the depth-dependent thermal conductivity leads to a larger core-mantle boundary (CMB) heat flow and allows the formation of more stable large thermochemical piles (e.g., Large Low Shear Velocity Provinces, LLSVPs); while decreasing the composition-dependent thermal conductivity would slightly destabilize the primordial thermochemical piles, increase the altitude of these piles and the temperature differences between the piles and the ambient mantle. If the primordial mantle material is compositionally more viscous (e.g., 20 times than that of the ambient mantle), the long-term stability of the thermochemical piles of primordial material decreases, and this destabilizing effect will be enhanced by decreasing the composition-dependent thermal conductivity. As a result, the thermochemical piles would be unstable in the core-mantle boundary region. Therefore, our study indicates that the combined effects of depth- and composition-dependent thermal conductivity and compositional viscosity ratio are pronounced to the thermochemical evolution of the mantle.

作者

我是这篇论文的作者
点击您的名字以认领此论文并将其添加到您的个人资料中。

评论

主要评分

4.6
评分不足

次要评分

新颖性
-
重要性
-
科学严谨性
-
评价这篇论文

推荐

暂无数据
暂无数据