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Published May 1987 | public
Journal Article

Kinetic theory of oxygen isotopic exchange between minerals and water

Abstract

Kinetic and mass conservation equations are used to describe oxygen isotopic exchange between minerals and water in "closed" and open hydrothermal systems. In cases where n coexisting mineral phases having different reaction rates are present, the exchange process is described by a system of n + 1 simultaneous differential equations consisting of n pseudo first-order rate equations and a conservation of mass equation. The simultaneous solutions to these equations generate curved exchange trajectories on δ-δ plots. Families of such trajectories generated under conditions allowing for different fluid mole fractions, different fluid isotopic compositions, or different fluid flow rates are connected by positive-sloped isochronous lines. These isochrons reproduce the effects observed in hydrothermally exchanged mineral pairs including 1) steep positive slopes, 2) common reversals in the measured fractionation factors (δ), and 3) measured fractionations that are highly variable over short distances where no thermal gradient can be geologically demonstrated.

Additional Information

We thank Steve Edwards and Anne M. Hofmeister for valuable mathematical suggestions and Mary F. Horan for assistance in computer programming. F. Albarede, A. Matthews, C. M. Johnson, D. R. Cole, and J. G. Arth provided helpful critical comments. This is contribution #4435, Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences, Caltech.

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023