2 resultados para spinel-lherzolite
em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
The work investigates the feasibility of a new process aimed at the production of hydrogen with inherent separation of carbon oxides. The process consists in a cycle in which, in the first step, a mixed metal oxide is reduced by ethanol (obtained from biomasses). The reduced metal is then contacted with steam in order to split the water and sequestrating the oxygen into the looping material’s structure. The oxides used to run this thermochemical cycle, also called “steam-iron process” are mixed ferrites in the spinel structure MeFe2O4 (Me = Fe, Co, Ni or Cu). To understand the reactions involved in the anaerobic reforming of ethanol, diffuse reflectance spectroscopy (DRIFTS) was used, coupled with the mass analysis of the effluent, to study the surface composition of the ferrites during the adsorption of ethanol and its transformations during the temperature program. This study was paired with the tests on a laboratory scale plant and the characterization through various techniques such as XRD, Mössbauer spectroscopy, elemental analysis... on the materials as synthesized and at different reduction degrees In the first step it was found that besides the generation of the expected CO, CO2 and H2O, the products of ethanol anaerobic oxidation, also a large amount of H2 and coke were produced. The latter is highly undesired, since it affects the second step, during which water is fed over the pre-reduced spinel at high temperature. The behavior of the different spinels was affected by the nature of the divalent metal cation; magnetite was the oxide showing the slower rate of reduction by ethanol, but on the other hand it was that one which could perform the entire cycle of the process more efficiently. Still the problem of coke formation remains the greater challenge to solve.
Resumo:
Convergent plate boundaries are sites of sustained chemical exchanges between the Earth’s surface and deep geochemical reservoirs, playing a major role in the global cycle of carbon and sulfur. However, carbon and sulfur recycling processes continue to be hotly debated. A critical gap in the knowledge of the whole subduction factory is given by the limited accessibility to the upper mantle residing above the subducting plate, the so-called mantle wedge. This thesis investigates the carbonate and sulfide metasomatism taking place during the whole metamorphic evolution of a mantle wedge involved in the Variscan continental collision. We integrate different detailed geochemical and petrological techniques to orogenic carbonated spinel and garnet peridotites from the Ulten Zone of the Eastern Italian Alps. Our data show that the Ulten Zone peridotite experienced multiple stages of addition and removal of carbon and sulfur throughout its metamorphic evolution, as follows: (1) The Variscan lithospheric mantle was initially depleted and sulfide-poor. It subsequently inherited a sulfur and carbon component during an early metasomatic stage, when hot, H2S-CO2-bearing melts leaving a subduction-modified source percolated the overlying spinel-facies peridotite in the mantle wedge; (2) Under peak eclogite-facies P-T conditions, pervasive carbonation and sulfidation occurred. Heterogeneous melt and fluid sources variably enriched in carbon, isotopically heavy sulfur and radiogenic Sr were involved; (3) Shortly after the attainment of peak-P conditions, peridotite bodies were incorporated in a tectonic mélange with the neighboring gneisses. Here, the Ulten Zone peridotite was exposed to channelized infiltration of hybridized C-O-H fluids that promoted the formation of veinlets of carbonates locally associated with sulfide grains. (4) Upon late retrogression, infiltration of serpentinizing fluids promoted C and S remobilization at shallow crustal levels.