Diffusive exchange of trace elements between alkaline melts: implications for element fractionation and timescale estimations during magma mixing
Diego Gonz\'alez-Garc\'ia, Maurizio Petrelli, Harald Behrens,, Francesco Vetere, Lennart A. Fischer, Daniele Morgavi, Diego Perugini

TL;DR
This study experimentally investigates how 30 trace elements diffuse between natural alkaline melts under magmatic conditions, revealing different diffusion behaviors influenced by water content and composition, with implications for understanding element fractionation and magma mixing timescales.
Contribution
It provides new experimental data on trace element diffusion in alkaline melts, highlighting the effects of water and composition on diffusion rates and uphill diffusion phenomena.
Findings
Water significantly enhances diffusion rates.
Uphill diffusion observed for certain REEs and trace elements.
Diffusion coefficients correlate with silica content.
Abstract
The diffusive exchange of 30 trace elements during the interaction of natural mafic and silicic alkaline melts was experimentally studied at conditions relevant to shallow magmatic systems. In detail, a set of 12 diffusion couple experiments have been performed between natural shoshonitic and rhyolitic melts from the Vulcano Island (Aeolian archipelago, Italy) at a temperature of 1200 {\deg}C, pressures from 50 to 500 MPa, and water contents ranging from nominally dry to ca. 2 wt. %. Concentration-distance profiles, measured by Laser Ablation ICP-MS, highlight different behaviours, and trace elements were divided into two groups: (1) elements with normal diffusion profiles (13 elements, mainly low field strength and transition elements), and (2) elements showing uphill diffusion (17 elements including Y, Zr, Nb, Pb and rare earth elements, except Eu). For the elements showing normal…
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