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Low hydrogen contents in the cores of terrestrial planets
Author(s) -
Vincent Clési,
M. A. Bouhifd,
Nathalie BolfanCasanova,
Geeth Manthilake,
Federica Schiavi,
Caroline Raepsaet,
Hélène Bureau,
H. Khodja,
D. Andrault
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.1701876
Subject(s) - astrobiology , lithophile , terrestrial planet , planet , hydrogen , accretion (finance) , astronomy , chemistry , astrophysics , physics , mantle (geology) , geophysics , organic chemistry , partial melting
Hydrogen has been thought to be an important light element in Earth's core due to possible siderophile behavior during core-mantle segregation. We reproduced planetary differentiation conditions using hydrogen contents of 450 to 1500 parts per million (ppm) in the silicate phase, pressures of 5 to 20 GPa, oxygen fugacity varying within IW-3.7 and IW-0.2 (0.2 to 3.7 log units lower than iron-wüstite buffer), and Fe alloys typical of planetary cores. We report hydrogen metal-silicate partition coefficients of ~2 × 10, up to two orders of magnitude lower than reported previously, and indicative of lithophile behavior. Our results imply H contents of ~60 ppm in the Earth and Martian cores. A simple water budget suggests that 90% of the water initially present in planetary building blocks was lost during planetary accretion. The retained water segregated preferentially into planetary mantles.

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