TY - JOUR
T1 - Radiative thermal conductivity of single-crystal bridgmanite at the core-mantle boundary with implications for thermal evolution of the Earth
AU - Murakami, Motohiko
AU - Goncharov, Alexander F.
AU - Miyajima, Nobuyoshi
AU - Yamazaki, Daisuke
AU - Holtgrewe, Nicholas
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank S. Petitgirard, I. Mashino, A. Shatskiy, N. Tsujino, S. Kamada, S. Ozawa and Y. Ito for their technical assistance for sample synthesis, preparation and characterization. We thank S. Lobanov for help with k rad and n calculations and error analysis. We are grateful to G. Manthilake for his constructive comments. This work was supported by KAKENHI ( 25247087 ) and ETH Zürich startup funding to MM. The work at Carnegie was supported by the NSF (Grant Nos. DMR-1039807 , EAR/IF-1128867 and EAR-1763287 ) and Carnegie Institution of Washington . The FIB facility at Bayerisches Geoinstitut is supported by DFG grant INST 91/315-1 FUGG .
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s)
PY - 2022/1/15
Y1 - 2022/1/15
N2 - The Earth has been releasing vast amounts of heat from deep Earth's interior to the surface since its formation, which primarily drives mantle convection and a number of tectonic activities. In this heat transport process the core-mantle boundary where hot molten core is in direct contact with solid-state mantle minerals has played an essential role to transfer thermal energies of the core to the overlying mantle. Although the dominant heat transfer mechanisms at the lowermost mantle is believed to be both conduction and radiation of the primary lowermost mantle mineral, bridgmanite, the radiative thermal conductivity of bridgmanite has so far been poorly constrained. Here we revealed the radiative thermal conductivity of bridgmanite at core-mantle boundary is substantially high approaching to ∼5.3±1.2 W/mK based on newly established optical absorption measurement of single-crystal bridgmanite performed in-situ under corresponding deep lower mantle conditions. We found the bulk thermal conductivity at core-mantle boundary becomes ∼1.5 times higher than the conventionally assumed value, which supports higher heat flow from core, hence more vigorous mantle convection than expected. Results suggest the mantle is much more efficiently cooled, which would ultimately weaken many tectonic activities driven by the mantle convection more rapidly than expected from conventionally believed thermal conduction behavior.
AB - The Earth has been releasing vast amounts of heat from deep Earth's interior to the surface since its formation, which primarily drives mantle convection and a number of tectonic activities. In this heat transport process the core-mantle boundary where hot molten core is in direct contact with solid-state mantle minerals has played an essential role to transfer thermal energies of the core to the overlying mantle. Although the dominant heat transfer mechanisms at the lowermost mantle is believed to be both conduction and radiation of the primary lowermost mantle mineral, bridgmanite, the radiative thermal conductivity of bridgmanite has so far been poorly constrained. Here we revealed the radiative thermal conductivity of bridgmanite at core-mantle boundary is substantially high approaching to ∼5.3±1.2 W/mK based on newly established optical absorption measurement of single-crystal bridgmanite performed in-situ under corresponding deep lower mantle conditions. We found the bulk thermal conductivity at core-mantle boundary becomes ∼1.5 times higher than the conventionally assumed value, which supports higher heat flow from core, hence more vigorous mantle convection than expected. Results suggest the mantle is much more efficiently cooled, which would ultimately weaken many tectonic activities driven by the mantle convection more rapidly than expected from conventionally believed thermal conduction behavior.
KW - heat transfer at the core-mantle boundary
KW - radiative thermal conductivity of bridgmanite
KW - thermal history of the Earth
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U2 - 10.1016/j.epsl.2021.117329
DO - 10.1016/j.epsl.2021.117329
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85120671833
SN - 0012-821X
VL - 578
JO - Earth and Planetary Sciences Letters
JF - Earth and Planetary Sciences Letters
M1 - 117329
ER -