SOLUBILITY OF ANHYDRITE (CASO4) IN NACL-H2O FROM 100 TO 450 DEGREES C AND 1 TO 1000 BARS

被引:208
作者
BLOUNT, CW
DICKSON, FW
机构
[1] Department of Geological Sciences, University of California, Riverside
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0016-7037(69)90140-9
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
The solubility of anhydrite was determined at temperatures ranging from 100 to 450°C, pressures from 1 to 1000 bars, and in solutions ranging in NaCl concentration from dilute to 6 moles NaCl per kg of H2O. Inreased pressure causes the solubility of anhydrite to become greater at all temperatures and NaCl concentrations. The effect of temperature and NaCl concentration increase is more complicated; the solubility diminishes with temperature rise to a minimum value at elevated temperatures. The location of the temperature minimum depends on NaCl concentration and is at progressively lower temperatures in solutions of increasing NaCl concentration. The solubility of anhydrite as a function of NaCl concentration rises to a maximum, the NaCl concentration at which depends on temperature and pressure. The maxima become progressively less pronounced at higher temperatures and at about 180°C the solubility continuously becomes greater at a lessening rate with increasing NaCl concentration. At about 300°C, anhydrite solubility rises linearly with increasing NaCl concentration and above 300°C the solubility rises at an increasing rate with increasing NaCl concentration. In nature, most H2O and NaCl-H2O solutions saturated with anhydrite would become undersaturated on migrating surfaceward and supersaturated on moving downward. An important exception to this generalization would be solutions subjected to changes above the conditions at which solubility minima occur. At such elevated temperatures and pressures, upward rising solutions would tend to become supersaturated. Highly saline solutions would be more effective in depositing anhydrite at shallow depths in response to temperature and pressure changes than would dilute saline or simple water solutions. Solutions undergoing pressure drop at nearly constant temperature, as might happen to solutions moving from regions of lithostatic pressure (zones of nearly impermeable rocks) to regions of lower pressure (fractures, permeable beds or drill holes) could precipitate anhydrite. Specialized conditions are required in general for the deep-seated precipitation of anhydrite. Therefore, the presence of anhydrite in igneous rocks or ore bodies can be used as evidence of previous existence of unusual temperature-pressure-compositional conditions. Anhydrite in sedimentary rocks could have formed in many ways, ranging from direct precipitation from sea water to the action of externally derived solutions flowing through the rooks. Some anhydrite would tend to precipitate from connate brines as sediments are subjected to temperature and pressure changes accompanying progressive burial and lithification. © 1969.
引用
收藏
页码:227 / &
相关论文
共 30 条
[1]   ON SOLUBILITY OF ANHYDROUS CALCIUM SULPHATE AND OF GYPSUM IN CONCENTRATED SOLUTIONS OF SODIUM CHLORIDE AT 25 DEGREES C, 30 DEGREES C, 40 DEGREES C, AND 50 DEGREES C [J].
BOCK, E .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE CHIMIE, 1961, 39 (09) :1746-&
[2]   SOLUBILITIES OF SALTS IN WATER AT HIGH TEMPERATURES [J].
BOOTH, HS ;
BIDWELL, RM .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1950, 72 (06) :2567-2575
[3]  
DANs J., 1955, KALI STEINSALZ, V1, P17
[4]   USE OF HYDROTHERMAL SOLUTION EQUIPMENT TO DETERMINE SOLUBILITY OF ANHYDRITE IN WATER FROM 100 DEGREES C TO 275 DEGREES C AND FROM 1 BAR TO 1000 BARS PRESSURE [J].
DICKSON, FW ;
TUNELL, G ;
BLOUNT, CW .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF SCIENCE, 1963, 261 (01) :61-&
[5]  
Flaschka HA, 1964, EDTA TITRATIONS
[6]  
FYFE WS, 1958, 73 GEOL SOC AM MEM, P259
[7]   The solubility of calcium sulfate at boiler-water temperatures [J].
Hall, RE ;
Robb, JA ;
Coleman, CE .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1926, 48 (01) :927-938
[8]  
HARA R, 1934, TECH REPTS TOHOKU IM, V11, P87
[9]  
HARDIE LA, 1967, AM MINERAL, V52, P171
[10]   The transition temperature of gypsum to anhydrite [J].
Hill, AE .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, 1937, 59 :2242-2244