Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/14461
Authors: Anzolini, Chiara* 
Marquardt, Katharina* 
Stagno, Vincenzo* 
Bindi, Luca* 
Frost, Daniel* 
Pearson, D Graham* 
Harris, Jeffrey W* 
Hemley, Russell* 
Nestola, Fabrizio* 
Title: Evidence for complex iron oxides in the deep mantle from FeNi(Cu) inclusions in superdeep diamond
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (PNAS) 
Series/Report no.: 35/117 (2020)
Issue Date: 2020
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2004269117
Keywords: Earth’s deep interior; Fe–Ni alloys; diamond inclusions; iron oxides; mantle dynamics
Subject Classification04.01. Earth Interior 
Abstract: The recent discovery in high-pressure experiments of compounds stable to 24-26 GPa with Fe4O5, Fe5O6, Fe7O9, and Fe9O11 stoichiometry has raised questions about their existence within the Earth's mantle. Incorporating both ferric and ferrous iron in their structures, these oxides if present within the Earth could also provide insight into diamond-forming processes at depth in the planet. Here we report the discovery of metallic particles, dominantly of FeNi (Fe0.71Ni0.24Cu0.05), in close spatial relation with nearly pure magnetite grains from a so-called superdeep diamond from the Earth's mantle. The microstructural relation of magnetite within a ferropericlase (Mg0.60Fe0.40)O matrix suggests exsolution of the former. Taking into account the bulk chemistry reconstructed from the FeNi(Cu) alloy, we propose that it formed by decomposition of a complex metal M oxide (M4O5) with a stoichiometry of (Fe3+2.15Fe2+1.59Ni2+0.17Cu+0.04)Σ=3.95O5 We further suggest a possible link between this phase and variably oxidized ferropericlase that is commonly trapped in superdeep diamond. The observation of FeNi(Cu) metal in relation to magnetite exsolved from ferropericlase is interpreted as arising from a multistage process that starts from diamond encapsulation of ferropericlase followed by decompression and cooling under oxidized conditions, leading to the formation of complex oxides such as Fe4O5 that subsequently decompose at shallower P-T conditions.
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