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Published March 18, 2021 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Trace Element Conundrum of Natural Quasicrystals

Abstract

We report laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry measurements of the trace element contents of the two naturally occurring quasicrystalline minerals, Al₆₃Cu₂₄Fe₁₃ icosahedrite and Al₇₁Ni₂₄Fe₅ decagonite, from their type locality in the Khatyrka meteorite. The isolated quasicrystal fragments were mounted separately from any matrix and are larger than the laser beam diameter. When the elements are sorted in order of volatility, a systematic and unique pattern emerges in both bulk natural quasicrystal specimens. They are highly depleted compared to primitive solar system materials (chondritic meteorites) in moderately refractory elements (those with 50% condensation temperatures near 1350–1300 K; V, Co, Mg, Cr) and significantly enriched in moderately volatile elements (those with 50% condensation temperatures between 1250 and 500 K; Sb, B, Ag, Sn, Bi). We compare the chondrite-normalized trace element patterns and ratios of the quasicrystals to those of scoriaceous cosmic spherules and other meteoritic components. The nonmonotonic shapes of the chondrite-normalized trace element patterns in both icosahedrite and decagonite are incompatible with a single condensation process from the gas of the solar nebula. Previous transmission electron microscopy studies show that the natural quasicrystals contain 3–5 vol % of silicate and oxide nanoparticle inclusions, which we consider to be the main host of the measured trace elements. On this basis, we construct a three-stage model for the formation of the quasicrystals and their inclusions: a high-temperature condensation stage and a low-temperature vapor-fractionation stage to make nanoparticles, followed by a third stage that leads to the formation of quasicrystals incorporating the two different types of nanoparticles and their incorporation into the CV chondrite parent body of the Khatyrka meteorite.

Additional Information

© 2021 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society. ACS AuthorChoice -- CC-BY. Received: January 6, 2021; Accepted: February 15, 2021; Published: February 25, 2021. We thank Timothy Eisele (Michigan Tech) and Paul Huysmans (Quality Manager at the KBM Affilips B.V. alloy corporation) for expert advice on the use of Al Cu alloys in industrial applications and Tom Tyner, lead chemistry advisor on Reagents for the American Chemical Society, and John Elfers, Thermo Fisher Scientific, for sharing their expertise on the Devarda Alloy. We also thank M. Humayun, C. Lin, and G.J. MacPherson for their unpublished results from an earlier trace element analysis at a lower resolution, which placed useful upper bounds and motivated the improved analysis presented in this paper. We thank four anonymous reviewers for their comments and constructive criticism, which led to a substantially improved paper. The editorial handling of Eric Herbst was greatly appreciated. The research was funded by MIUR-PRIN2017, project "TEOREM deciphering geological processes using Terrestrial and Extraterrestrial ORE Minerals", prot. 2017AK8C32 (PI: Luca Bindi). Author Contributions: L.B. designed the research and led the scientific team; M.P. obtained the trace element data; S.T., L.B., P.D.A, and P.J.S. wrote the paper; all authors discussed and commented on the results and gave approval to the final version of the manuscript. The authors declare no competing financial interest.

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023