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Quantifying Li isotope fractionation during smectite formation and implications for the Li cycle
Authors:N Vigier  A Decarreau  J Carignan  C France-Lanord
Institution:a CRPG-CNRS, Nancy Université, 15 rue ND des pauvres, 54501 Vandoeuvre les Nancy Cedex, France
b HydrASA, UMR CNRS 6532, Université de Poitiers, Facultés des Sciences, Bât. Sci. Naturelles, 40 av. du Recteur Pineau, 86022 Poitiers Cedex, France
c BRGM, Metrology, Monitoring, Analysis Division, 3 avenue Claude Guillemin, BP 6009, 45060 Orléans Cedex 2, France
Abstract:Tri-octahedral Li-Mg smectites (hectorites) were synthesized at temperatures ranging from 25 to 250 °C, in the presence of solutions highly enriched in lithium. After removing all the exchangeable lithium from the synthesized clays, Li isotope fractionation (Δ7Liclay-solution) was determined. This fractionation was linked to Li incorporation into the structural octahedral site, substituting for Mg2+. As predicted, experimental Δ7Liclay-solution inversely correlates with temperature, and ranges from −1.6‰ ± 1.3‰ at 250 °C to −10.0‰ ± 1.3‰ at 90 °C, and then stays relatively constant down to 25 °C. The relatively constant isotope fractionation factor below 90 °C may be due to high concentrations of edge octahedra in low crystallinity smectites. The isotopic fractionation factor (α), for a given temperature, does not depend on the solution matrix, nor on the amount of structural Li incorporated into the clay. Empirical linear laws for α as a function of 1/T (K) were inferred. Smectite Li contents and smectite-solution distribution coefficients (DLi/Mg) increase with temperature, as expected for a substitution process. The fractions of dissolved Li incorporated into the smectite octahedral sites are small and do not depend on the duration of the experiment. In a seawater-like matrix solution, less Li is incorporated into the smectites, probably as a result of competition with dissolved Mg2+ ions for incorporation into the octahedral sites. The high Li contents observed in marine smectites are therefore best explained either by a significant contribution from basalts, by adsorption processes, or by the influence of seawater chemical composition on distribution coefficients. We also calculate, using present-day estimates of hydrothermal water and river fluxes, that a steady-state ocean would require a relatively large global clay-water Li isotope fractionation (−12‰ to −21‰). This study demonstrates the ability of laboratory experiments to quantify the impact of secondary phases on the Li geochemical cycle and associated isotope fractionations.
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