Title of article :
Structural, chemical, and isotopic microanalytical investigations of graphite from supernovae
Author/Authors :
Amari، Sachiko نويسنده , , Messenger، Scott نويسنده , , Croat، T. Kevin نويسنده , , Bernatowicz، Thomas نويسنده , , Stadermann، Frank J. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
We report the results of coordinated ion microprobe and transmission electron microscope (TEM) studies of presolar graphites from the KE3 separate (1.65–1.72 g/cm3) of the Murchison CM2 meteorite. Isotopic analysis of individual graphites (1–12 (mu)m) with the ion microprobe shows many to have large 18O excesses combined with large silicon isotopic anomalies, indicative of a supernova (SN) origin. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) of ultramicrotome slices of these SN graphites revealed a high abundance (25–2400 ppm) of internal titanium carbides (TiCs), with a single graphite in some cases containing hundreds of TiCs. Isotopic compositions of individual TiCs by nanoscale resolution secondary ion mass spectrometry (NanoSIMS) confirmed their presolar origin. In addition to TiCs, composite TiC/Fe grains (TiCs with attached iron–nickel subgrains) and solitary kamacite internal grains were found. In the composite grains, the attached iron phase (kamacite [0–24 at. % Ni] or taenite [up to 60 at. % Ni]) was epitaxially grown onto one or more TiC faces. In contrast to the denser Murchison KFC1 graphites, no Zr-Ti-Mo carbides were observed. The average TiC diameters were quite variable among the SN graphites, from 30 to 232 nm, and were generally independent of the host graphite size. TiC grain morphologies ranged from euhedral to anhedral, with the grain surfaces exhibiting variable degrees of corrosion, and sometimes partially amorphous rims (3 to 15 nm thick). Partially amorphous rims of similar thickness were also observed on some solitary kamacite grains. We speculate that the rims on the internal grains are most plausibly the result of atom bombardment caused by drift of grains with respect to the ambient gas, requiring relative outflow speeds ~100 km/s (i.e., a few percent of the SN mass outflow speed). Energy dispersive X-ray spectrometry (EDXS) of TiCs revealed significant V in solid solution, with an average V/Ti ratio over all TiCs of ~83% of the solar value of 0.122. Significant variations about the mean V/Ti ratio were also seen among TiCs in the same graphite, likely indicating chemical equilibration with the surrounding gas over a range of temperatures. In general, the diversity in internal TiC properties suggests that TiCs formed first and had substantially diverse histories before incorporation into the graphite, implying some degree of turbulent mixing in the SN outflows.
Keywords :
Carbonyl complexes , Phosphaalkenes , Lewis acids , Protonation , Alkylation
Journal title :
GEOCHIMICA & COSMOCHIMICA ACTA
Journal title :
GEOCHIMICA & COSMOCHIMICA ACTA