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GEOCHEMISTRY GEOPHYSICS GEOSYSTEMS,
VOL. 3, NO. 5,
1030,
doi:10.1029/2001GC000217,
2002
The pMELTS: A revision of MELTS for improved calculation of phase relations and major element partitioning related to partial
melting of the mantle to 3 GPa
Mark S. Ghiorso
Department of Earth and Space Sciences,
University of Washington,
Seattle,
Washington 98195,
Box 351310,
USA
Marc M. Hirschmann
Department of Geology and Geophysics,
University of Minnesota,
310 Pillsbury Drive SE,
Minneapolis,
Minnesota 55455,
USA
Peter W. Reiners
Department of Geology and Geophysics,
Yale University,
New Haven,
Connecticut 06520,
P.O. Box 208109,
USA
Victor C. Kress III
Department of Earth and Space Sciences,
University of Washington,
Seattle,
Washington 98195,
Box 351310,
USA
Abstract
We describe a newly calibrated model for the thermodynamic properties of magmatic silicate liquid. The new model, pMELTS,
is based on MELTS [
Ghiorso and Sack, 1995
] but has a number of improvements aimed at increasing the accuracy of calculations of partial melting of spinel peridotite.
The pMELTS algorithm uses models of the thermodynamic properties of minerals and the phase equilibrium algorithms of MELTS,
but the model for silicate liquid differs from MELTS in the following ways: (1) The new algorithm is calibrated from an expanded
set of mineral-liquid equilibrium constraints from 2439 experiments, 54% more than MELTS. (2) The new calibration includes
mineral components not considered during calibration of MELTS and results in 11,394 individual mineral-liquid calibration
constraints (110% more than MELTS). Of these, 4924 statements of equilibrium are from experiments conducted at elevated pressure
(200% more than MELTS). (3) The pMELTS model employs an improved liquid equation of state based on a third-order Birch-Murnaghan
equation, calibrated from high-pressure sink-float and shockwave experiments to 10 GPa. (4) The new model employs a revised
set of end-member liquid components. The revised components were chosen to better span liquid composition-space. Thermodynamic
properties of these components are optimized as part of the mineral-liquid calibration. Comparison of pMELTS to partial melting
relations of spinel peridotite from experiments near 1 GPa indicates significant improvements relative to MELTS, but important
outstanding problems remain. The pMELTS model accurately predicts oxide concentrations, including SiO2, for liquids from partial melting of MM3 peridotite at 1 GPa from near the solidus up to ∼25% melting. Compared to experiments,
the greatest discrepancy is for MgO, for which the calculations are between 1 and 4% high. Temperatures required to achieve
a given melt fraction match those of the experiments near the solidus but are ∼60°C high over much of the spinel lherzolite
melting interval at this pressure. Much of this discrepancy can probably be attributed to overstabilization of clinopyroxene
in pMELTS under these conditions. Comparison of pMELTS calculations to the crystallization and partial melting experiments
of
Falloon et al. [1999]
shows excellent agreement but also suffers from exaggerated calculated stability of clinopyroxene. Finally, comparison of
pMELTS calculations to the garnet peridotite experiments of
Walter [1998]
at 3–7 GPa reveals disparities between calculations and experiments that increase with pressure. The most prominent of these
disparities is manifest as overprediction of the stability of garnet and underprediction of that of olivine. Part of this
problem may be attributed to inadequacies in the Birch-Murnaghan equation of state in reproducing the behavior of highly compressible
liquids at high pressures and temperatures.
Received 20
August
2001;
accepted 21
January
2002;
published 31
May
2002.
Keywords: Mantle;
partial melting;
thermodynamic model;
pMELTS;
peridotite.
Index Terms: 3939 Mineral Physics: Physical thermodynamics; 3630 Mineralogy and Petrology: Experimental mineralogy and petrology; 3640 Mineralogy and Petrology: Igneous petrology; 3655 Mineralogy and Petrology: Major element composition.
Read Full Article (file size: 1694884 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Ghiorso, M. S., M. M. Hirschmann, P. W. Reiners, and V. C. Kress III
(2002),
The pMELTS: A revision of MELTS for improved calculation of phase relations and major element partitioning related to partial
melting of the mantle to 3 GPa,
Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst.,
3(5),
1030,
doi:10.1029/2001GC000217.
Copyright 2002 by the American Geophysical Union.
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