Thermal Alteration of Labile Elements in Carbonaceous Chondrites
Alessondra Springmann, Dante S. Lauretta, Bjoern Klaue, Yulia S., Goreva, Joel D. Blum, Alexandre Andronikov, and Jordan K. Steckloff

TL;DR
This study investigates how labile elements in carbonaceous chondrites are mobilized during thermal metamorphism, revealing temperature-dependent elemental loss that impacts asteroid evolution, sample integrity, and space resource utilization.
Contribution
It provides experimental data on the thermal mobilization of labile elements in primitive meteorites, highlighting their sensitivity to low-temperature heating events.
Findings
Elements like S and Hg are highly responsive to temperature changes.
Appreciable element loss occurs at temperatures as low as 500 K.
Labile element mobilization affects asteroid composition and space resource strategies.
Abstract
Carbonaceous chondrite meteorites are some of the oldest Solar System planetary materials available for study. The CI group has bulk abundances of elements similar to those of the solar photosphere. Of particular interest in carbonaceous chondrite compositions are labile elements, which vaporize and mobilize efficiently during post-accretionary parent-body heating events. Thus, they can record low-temperature alteration events throughout asteroid evolution. However, the precise nature of labile-element mobilization in planetary materials is unknown. Here we characterize the thermally induced movements of the labile elements S, As, Se, Te, Cd, Sb, and Hg in carbonaceous chondrites by conducting experimental simulations of volatile-element mobilization during thermal metamorphism. This process results in appreciable loss of some elements at temperatures as low as 500 K. This work builds…
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