A cold-sealing capsule design for synthesis of fluid inclusions and other hydrothermal experiments in a piston-cylinder apparatus

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Hack, Alistair
Mavrogenes, John

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Mineralogical Society of America

Abstract

Here we report on a newly developed, large-volume, cold-sealed capsule design for hydrothermal synthesis experiments in a piston-cylinder apparatus that should be useful for the production of synthetic fluid inclusions at pressures and temperatures not previously attained in gas- or fluid-pressurized reaction vessels. The design is adapted for large-volume experiments using a 30 mm internal-diameter pressure vessel, but can be scaled down to suit smaller pressure vessels, e.g., 15.9 mm (5/8″) internal diameter, if required. Calibration experiments show that temperature varies ±5 °C over the length of a 30 mm (length) × 15 mm (diameter) Cu capsule. The design incorporates the thermocouple within the capsule mass to optimize temperature control. Quartz-hosted H2O inclusions were synthesized over a range of conditions. Fluid-inclusion densities are consistent with the nominal experimental conditions, suggesting a friction correction is not required. This approach has several advantages over conventional hydrothermal experimental methods: (1) substantially higher pressures are attainable in piston-cylinder than hydrothermal and gas-media apparatus; (2) cold-sealing capsules avoid potential problems associated with welded capsules, such as solution modification; (3) capsule fluids are readily sampled ex situ; (4) the use of relatively thick-walled capsules minimizes H2-losses during experiments; (5) synthetic fluid inclusions can be used to derive fluid PVTX properties by combining conventional thermometry with analyses of individual fluid inclusions or independent mineral solubility data.

Description

Citation

Source

American Mineralogist

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31