Title of article
Diffusion of helium in zircon and apatite
Author/Authors
Cherniak، نويسنده , , D.J and Watson، نويسنده , , E.B. and Thomas، نويسنده , , J.B.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
12
From page
155
To page
166
Abstract
Diffusion of helium has been characterized in natural zircon and apatite. Polished slabs of zircon and apatite, oriented either normal or parallel to c were implanted with 100 keV 3He at a dose of 5 × 1015 3 He/cm2. Diffusion experiments on implanted zircon and apatite were run in Pt capsules in 1-atm furnaces. 3He distributions following experiments were measured with Nuclear Reaction Analysis using the reaction 3He(d,p)4He. For diffusion in zircon we obtain the following Arrhenius relations: D ⊥ c = 2.3 × 10 − 7 exp ( − 146 ± 11 kJ mol − 1 / R T ) m 2 s − 1 . D ∥ c = 1.7 × 10 − 5 exp ( − 148 ± 17 kJ mol − 1 / R T ) m 2 s − 1 .
gh activation energies for diffusion normal and parallel to c are comparable, there is marked diffusional anisotropy, with diffusion parallel to c nearly 2 orders of magnitude faster than transport normal to c. These diffusivities bracket the range of values determined for He diffusion in zircon in bulk-release experiments, although the role of anisotropy could not be directly evaluated in those measurements.
tite, the following Arrhenius relation was obtained over the temperature range of 148–449 °C for diffusion normal to c: D = 2.10 × 10 − 6 exp ( − 117 ± 6 kJ mol − 1 / R T ) m 2 s − 1 .
trast to zircon, apatite shows little evidence of anisotropy. He diffusivities obtained in this study fall about an order of magnitude lower than diffusivities measured through bulk release of He through step-heating, and within an order of magnitude of determinations where ion implantation was used to introduce helium and He distributions measured with elastic recoil detection.
the diffusion of He in zircon exhibits such pronounced anisotropy, helium diffusional loss and closure cannot be modeled with simple spherical geometries and the assumption of isotropic diffusion. A finite-element code (CYLMOD) has recently been created to simulate diffusion in cylindrical geometry with differing radial and axial diffusion coefficients. We present some applications of the code in evaluating helium lost from zircon grains as a function of grain size and length to diameter ratios, and consider the effects of “shape anisotropy”, where diffusion is isotropic (as in the case of apatite) but shapes of crystal grains or fragments may depart significantly from spherical geometry.
Keywords
Helium , apatite , diffusion , zircon , Nuclear reaction analysis , thermochronology
Journal title
Chemical Geology
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Chemical Geology
Record number
2259623
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