Carbon dioxide in silicate melts: A molecular dynamics simulation study
B. Guillot, N. Sator

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to investigate how CO2 dissolves, exists, and moves within silicate melts at high pressures and temperatures, providing insights into deep Earth carbon processes.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive molecular dynamics approach to evaluate CO2 solubility and speciation in silicate melts across a range of compositions and conditions, extending beyond experimental limitations.
Findings
CO2 solubility varies with melt composition and pressure.
Molecular and carbonate species populations depend on temperature and pressure.
Diffusivity of CO2 in melts influences deep Earth carbon transport.
Abstract
The distribution, recycling and storage of carbon in the Earth are of fundamental importance to understand the global carbon cycle between the deep Earth and near surface reservoirs. Degassing of CO2 at mid-ocean ridges may give information on the source region but the very low solubility of CO2 in tholeitic basalts has for consequence that near all Mid-Ocean Ridge Basalts glasses exsolve their CO2 rich vapor at shallow depth as they approach the ocean floor. Hence their CO2 contents mostly represent the pressure at eruption and not the source region. Recent petrological investigations have shown that the presence of carbonates at depth in the upper mantle has a large effect on the solidus of carbonated silicates by inducing incipient melting at much lower temperature. So the role of carbon-rich melts at great depth is now becoming a credible scenario to explain the extraction of CO2…
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