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American Mineralogist; August 1997; v. 82; no. 7-8; p. 754-759
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Thermochemistry and the enthalpy of formation of synthetic end-member (CaTiSiO 5 ) titanite

Dimitrios Xirouchakis, Sophie Fritsch, Robert L. Putnam, Alexandra Navrotsky, and Donald H. Lindsley

State University of New York at Stony Brook, Center for High Pressure Research, Stony Brook, NY, United States

The enthalpy of drop solution of a quickly quenched, clear, titanite glass sample and several synthetic, polycrystalline, samples was measured in a Calvet-type calorimeter in 2PbO.B 2 O 3 solvent at 702 degrees C. The enthalpy of formation of stoichiometric, end-member (CaTiSiO 5 ) titanite is redetermined to be -119.59+ or -2.24 kJ/mol from the oxides and -2610.13+ or -2.90 kJ/mol from the elements at 25 degrees C. The new value is either 8.725 or 13.525 kJ/mol more negative than the currently accepted values derived from calorimetry and phase-equilibrium experiments. The presence of impurities and possibly nonstoichiometry in the original sample, used in the previous calorimetric studies, are probably responsible for this discrepancy. This interpretation is further supported by the correlation of the variations in the measured enthalpies of drop solution to the documented physical differences among the synthetic polycrystalline samples used in this study. At 25 degrees C the enthalpy of formation of CaTiSiO 5 glass is -38.775+ or -3.37 kJ/mol from the oxides and -2529.31+ or -3.84 from the elements and the enthalpy of vitrification of titanite is 80.78+ or -3.59 kJ/mol.

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D. Xirouchakis, D. H. Lindsley, and D. J. Andersen
Assemblages with titanite (CaTiOSiO4), Ca-Mg-Fe olivine and pyroxenes, Fe-Mg-Ti oxides, and quartz: Part I. Theory
American Mineralogist, March 1, 2001; 86(3): 247 - 253.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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