Core-exsolved SiO$_2$ dispersal in the Earth's mantle
G. Helffrich, M. D. Ballmer, and K. Hirose

TL;DR
This paper investigates the dispersal and accumulation of SiO$_2$ in the Earth's lower mantle, suggesting that early Earth conditions could have led to significant SiO$_2$ inclusions affecting seismic properties.
Contribution
It introduces a model for SiO$_2$ dispersal at the core-mantle boundary and its potential accumulation in the lower mantle, considering early Earth conditions and viscosity contrasts.
Findings
SiO$_2$ diapirs could have risen to neutral buoyancy in the mantle.
Dispersed SiO$_2$ could reach up to 8.5 vol.% in the lower mantle.
SiO$_2$ inclusions may explain small-scale seismic scattering.
Abstract
SiO may have been expelled from the core directly following core formation in the early stages of Earth's accretion and onwards through the present day. On account of SiO's low density with respect to both the core and the lowermost mantle, we examine the process of SiO accumulation at the core-mantle boundary (CMB) and its incorporation into the mantle by buoyant rise. Today, if SiO is 100-10000 times more viscous than lower mantle material, the dimensions of SiO diapirs formed by the viscous Rayleigh-Taylor instability at the CMB would cause them to be swept into the mantle as inclusions of 100 m - 10 km diameter. Under early Earth conditions of rapid heat loss after core formation, SiO diapirs of ~1 km diameter could have risen independently of mantle flow to their level of neutral buoyancy in the mantle, trapping them there due to a combination of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsHigh-pressure geophysics and materials · Geological and Geochemical Analysis · earthquake and tectonic studies
