In situ analysis of Refractory Metal Nuggets in carbonaceous chondrites

Micrometre to sub-micrometre-scale alloys of platinum group elements (PGEs) known as Refractory Metal Nuggets (RMNs) have been observed in primitive meteorites. The Australian Synchrotron X-ray Fluorescence (XRF) beamline, in tandem with the Maia detector, allows rapid detection of PGEs in concentra...

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Main Authors: Daly, L., Bland, Phil, Dyl, K., Forman, Lucy, Evans, K., Trimby, P., Moody, S., Yang, L., Liu, H., Ringer, S., Ryan, C., Saunders, M.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Pergamon 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/44215
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author Daly, L.
Bland, Phil
Dyl, K.
Forman, Lucy
Evans, K.
Trimby, P.
Moody, S.
Yang, L.
Liu, H.
Ringer, S.
Ryan, C.
Saunders, M.
author_facet Daly, L.
Bland, Phil
Dyl, K.
Forman, Lucy
Evans, K.
Trimby, P.
Moody, S.
Yang, L.
Liu, H.
Ringer, S.
Ryan, C.
Saunders, M.
author_sort Daly, L.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Micrometre to sub-micrometre-scale alloys of platinum group elements (PGEs) known as Refractory Metal Nuggets (RMNs) have been observed in primitive meteorites. The Australian Synchrotron X-ray Fluorescence (XRF) beamline, in tandem with the Maia detector, allows rapid detection of PGEs in concentrations as low as 50-100. ppm at 2. µm resolution. Corroborating these analyses with traditional electron microscopy techniques, RMNs can be rapidly identified . in situ within carbonaceous chondrites. These results dispute the assumption of most previous studies: that RMNs are unique to Ca-Al-rich inclusions (CAIs). We find that RMNs are, in fact, observed within all components of carbonaceous chondrites, such as the matrix, chondrules (consistent with observations from Schwander et al. (2015b) and Wang et al. (2007)), and sulphides; though the majority of RMNs are still found in CAIs. The chemistry of RMNs reveals a complex diversity of compositions, which nevertheless averages to CI chondrite abundance ratios. This implies that RMNs are the dominant, if not sole host phase for PGEs. One hundred and thirteen RMNs from this study are combined with reported compositions in the literature, and compared to condensation model compositions similar to Berg et al. (2009), RMNs derived experimentally by precipitation (Schwander et al., 2015a), host phase and host meteorite. Comparisons reveal only weak correlations between parent body processes (sulphidation) and nebular processes (condensation and precipitation) with RMN compositions. It appears that none of these processes acting in isolation or in tandem can explain the diversity observed in the RMN population. Our interpretation is that the Solar Nebula inherited an initially compositionally diverse population of RMNs from the Giant Molecular Cloud; that a variety of Solar System processes have acted on that population; but none have completely homogenised it. Most RMNs have experienced disk and asteroidal processing, but some may have retained a primordial composition. RMNs have been identified in pre-solar graphite grains (Croat et al., 2013). We anticipate that pre-solar RMNs will be present elsewhere in primitive meteorites.
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publishDate 2016
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-442152019-09-20T01:27:24Z In situ analysis of Refractory Metal Nuggets in carbonaceous chondrites Daly, L. Bland, Phil Dyl, K. Forman, Lucy Evans, K. Trimby, P. Moody, S. Yang, L. Liu, H. Ringer, S. Ryan, C. Saunders, M. Micrometre to sub-micrometre-scale alloys of platinum group elements (PGEs) known as Refractory Metal Nuggets (RMNs) have been observed in primitive meteorites. The Australian Synchrotron X-ray Fluorescence (XRF) beamline, in tandem with the Maia detector, allows rapid detection of PGEs in concentrations as low as 50-100. ppm at 2. µm resolution. Corroborating these analyses with traditional electron microscopy techniques, RMNs can be rapidly identified . in situ within carbonaceous chondrites. These results dispute the assumption of most previous studies: that RMNs are unique to Ca-Al-rich inclusions (CAIs). We find that RMNs are, in fact, observed within all components of carbonaceous chondrites, such as the matrix, chondrules (consistent with observations from Schwander et al. (2015b) and Wang et al. (2007)), and sulphides; though the majority of RMNs are still found in CAIs. The chemistry of RMNs reveals a complex diversity of compositions, which nevertheless averages to CI chondrite abundance ratios. This implies that RMNs are the dominant, if not sole host phase for PGEs. One hundred and thirteen RMNs from this study are combined with reported compositions in the literature, and compared to condensation model compositions similar to Berg et al. (2009), RMNs derived experimentally by precipitation (Schwander et al., 2015a), host phase and host meteorite. Comparisons reveal only weak correlations between parent body processes (sulphidation) and nebular processes (condensation and precipitation) with RMN compositions. It appears that none of these processes acting in isolation or in tandem can explain the diversity observed in the RMN population. Our interpretation is that the Solar Nebula inherited an initially compositionally diverse population of RMNs from the Giant Molecular Cloud; that a variety of Solar System processes have acted on that population; but none have completely homogenised it. Most RMNs have experienced disk and asteroidal processing, but some may have retained a primordial composition. RMNs have been identified in pre-solar graphite grains (Croat et al., 2013). We anticipate that pre-solar RMNs will be present elsewhere in primitive meteorites. 2016 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/44215 10.1016/j.gca.2016.11.030 Pergamon restricted
spellingShingle Daly, L.
Bland, Phil
Dyl, K.
Forman, Lucy
Evans, K.
Trimby, P.
Moody, S.
Yang, L.
Liu, H.
Ringer, S.
Ryan, C.
Saunders, M.
In situ analysis of Refractory Metal Nuggets in carbonaceous chondrites
title In situ analysis of Refractory Metal Nuggets in carbonaceous chondrites
title_full In situ analysis of Refractory Metal Nuggets in carbonaceous chondrites
title_fullStr In situ analysis of Refractory Metal Nuggets in carbonaceous chondrites
title_full_unstemmed In situ analysis of Refractory Metal Nuggets in carbonaceous chondrites
title_short In situ analysis of Refractory Metal Nuggets in carbonaceous chondrites
title_sort in situ analysis of refractory metal nuggets in carbonaceous chondrites
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/44215