Title: Surface Reactivity from the Atomic to the Global Scale
1Surface Reactivity from the Atomic to the Global
Scale
Eric H. Oelkers Experimental Geochemistry and
Biogeochemistry LMTG/Université Paul Sabatier,
Toulouse, FRANCE
2The Calcite water interface deduced from X-ray
reflectivity
After Fenter et al., 2000
3Transition State Theory
Mineral lt-gt A lt-gt B lt-gt Activated complex1 -gt
Products
r kActivated Complexes
r- k-Activated Complexes
Overall rate
- rr - r- r (1-exp(-A/nRT))
4Activated Complex Formation
1) Sorption of aqueous species
2) Breaking bridging bonds by removal of adjacent
atoms
5AFM Images of Dissolving Calcite
Corners dissolve more rapidly than edges
Jordan and Rammensee (1998) T24 C, pure H2O
6Multi-oxide Mineral Dissolution Metal-Oxygen
bonds break at very different rates
Single (Hydr)oxide dissolution rates pH2, T25 C
7Dissolution Mechanism Depends on Mineral Structure
Minerals that require breaking of more than one
bond
- Minerals that require breaking of only a single
bond
e.g. quartz, olivine
e.g. alkali-feldspars, clay minerals
Activated complex formed by sorption reactions
Activated complex formed by exchange reactions
8(No Transcript)
9 Basaltic Glass Dissolution Mechanism
Si
Al
Si
10 Basaltic Glass Dissolution Mechanism Step 1
Mono/divalent metal exchange
Si
Al
Si
11 Basaltic Glass Dissolution Mechanism Step 2
Trivalent metal-proton exchange
Si
Al
Si
12 Basaltic Glass Dissolution Mechanism Step 2
Trivalent metal-proton exchange
Si
Al
Si
Si
13 Basaltic Glass Dissolution Mechanism Step 3 Si
removal
Si
Al
Si
14Basaltic Glass Dissolution Rate Equation
Aqueous Activity Ratio
Chemical Affinity of Al-Si-Fe surface layer
normalized to 1 Si
15Variation of measured Basaltic Glass Dissolution
rates with (aH/aAl3) (Oelkers and Gislason,
2001)
A single regression curve is found for all data
at both acidic and basic pH
16Computed and measured basaltic glass dissolution
rates as a function of pH (Gislason and Oelkers,
2003)
17Whole Core flow reactor
18Whole core dissolution Experiments
Fontainebleau Sandstone Keiffer et al., (1999)
Permeability Variation
Solution Chemistry Variation -gt Reactive surface
area
19Core flow reactor in situ fluid evolution
20Whole core dissolution studies in situ
analysis of rock during dissolution
Noiriel et al. (2004)
21daprès D. Bernard
22Precipitation rates What do we know?
Diffuse Growth
Spiral Growth
Germination/ 2-D growth
23Example Modeling of illite formation in Garn
formation (Oelkers et al., in prep.)
Al2Si2O5(OH)4 KAlSi3O8 KAl3Si3O10(OH)2
2SiO2 H2O
K-spar
Illite
quartz
kaolinite
Model results using published rate data
80
Temperature, C
120
Model results taking account of illite nucleation
2-D growth
24Mineral Reactions and Global Climate Moderation
dissolution of primary silicate minerals
coupled to CO2 consumption
2CO2 3H2O CaAl2Si2O8 -gt Ca2 2HCO3-
Al2Si2O5(OH)4
Clay formation
Ca-silicate Dissolution
CO2 consumption
Temperature dependence of dissolution far
stronger in sea water than most surface waters
25Global Suspended material Flux (Milliman and
Meade, 1981)
26- Jökulsá á Fjöllum
- Jökulsá á Dal.
- Jökulsá í Fljótsdal
- Fellsá
- Grímsá.
- Fjardará
- Lagarfljót
27The suspended flux is much more runoff dependent
than the dissolved Ca-flux (Gislason, Oelkers and
Snorrason 2005)
28Because of the runoff dependence difference
between the suspended and dissolved Ca fluxes,
the suspended flux is more climate/runoff
dependent. (Gislason, Oelkers and Snorrason
2005)
29Surface Reactivity from the Atomic to the Global
Scale
Eric H. Oelkers Experimental Geochemistry and
Biogeochemistry LMTG/Université Paul Sabatier,
Toulouse, FRANCE