High pressure-temperature proton migration in P-3 brucite [Mg(OH)2]: Implication for electrical conductivity in deep mantle
Sudip Kumar Mondal, Pratik Kumar Das, and Nibir Mandal

TL;DR
This study uses ab initio simulations to explore how proton mobility in P-3 brucite varies with pressure and temperature, revealing a maximum diffusion at certain mantle conditions and implications for Earth's electrical conductivity.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of pressure-temperature effects on proton migration in P-3 brucite, linking proton mobility to mantle conductivity.
Findings
Maximum H-diffusion occurs at 72-76 GPa
Proton mobility onset depends on critical pressure and temperature
Amorphization of H-sublattice increases electrical conductivity
Abstract
Hydrous minerals contribute largely to the transport and distribution of water into the mantle of earth to regulate the process of deep-water cycle. Brucite is one of the simplest layered dense hydrous mineral belonging to MgO-SiO2-H2O ternary system, which contains significant amount of water in the form of OH- groups, spanning a wide range of pressure stability. Simultaneously, the pressure (p) and temperature (T) induced mobility of protons within the layered structure of brucite is crucial for consequences on electrical conductivity of the mantle. Using ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulations, we investigate the diffusion of H in high-pressure trigonal P-3 polymorph of brucite in a combined p-T range of 10-85 GPa and 1250-2000K, relevant to the mantle of earth. The AIMD simulations reveal an unusual pressure-dependence of the proton migration in brucite characterized by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHigh-pressure geophysics and materials · earthquake and tectonic studies · Earthquake Detection and Analysis
