EGU26-13441, updated on 14 Mar 2026
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13441
EGU General Assembly 2026
© Author(s) 2026. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
High-Temperature phase transitions in serpentine
R.Valli Divya1 and Rajkrishna Dutta2
R.Valli Divya and Rajkrishna Dutta
  • 1IIT Gandhinagar, Gandhinagar, India (vallidivya.rajendran@gmail.com)
  • 2Princeton University, New Jersey, United States of America (rd7@princeton.edu)

Serpentines are widely used to investigate lithospheric strength, subduction-zone processes, and the cycling of carbon and water in the Earth. In this work we have investigated the high-temperature phase transitions in natural serpentine with respect to the time of heating. The starting material was obtained by grinding natural serpentine sample and verified using powder X-ray diffraction (λ = 1.5406 Å). The powder was heated at temperatures from 300 to 1000 °C in 100 °C increments for durations ranging from 30 minutes to 24 hours, using 1–6 hour intervals. No phase changes were observed up to 400 °C. Two forsterite (Mg2SiO4) peaks at 35.993° and 36.857° first appeared in the XRD pattern at 500 °C after 3 hours of heating. The first appearance of enstatite (MgSiO3), marked by peaks at 28.1880 and 31.2890 were observed in the XRD pattern at 6000C starting at 8 hours of heating. Our work provides a robust temperature-time (T-t) phase diagram. The systematic T-t framework shows that serpentine breakdown and forsterite/enstatite formation depend on both temperature and duration of heating, rather than temperature alone. This can have implications for subducting slabs; where mineral transformations, fluid release, and associated changes in rheology may be governed by slab thermal histories and residence times at depth. These effects can influence interpretations of slab strength, seismic structure, and volatile cycling in subduction zones.

How to cite: Divya, R. V. and Dutta, R.: High-Temperature phase transitions in serpentine, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-13441, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-13441, 2026.

OSPP voting tool

This contribution takes part in the OSPP contest. Please log in to see the relevant judging section.

Supplementary materials

Supplementary material file

Comments on the supplementary material

AC: Author Comment | CC: Community Comment | Report abuse

supplementary materials version 1 – uploaded on 02 May 2026
  • CC1: Comment on EGU26-13441, Jannick Ingrin, 06 May 2026 Reply

    Dear R. Valli Divya,

     

    Thank you for your poster and interesting results. Do you have an idea how initial grain size affect the kinetics of the transformations observed?

    I also wonder if you plan to study the same samples under PO2 controlled environment?

    Best regards,

     

    J. Ingrin

    Reply

    • AC1: Reply to CC1, R.Valli Divya, 06 May 2026 Reply

      Hello. Thank you for the question. There are studies on serpentine mineral samples on grain size influencing the kinetics of phase transformations. Smaller the size lower the temperature of nucleation of forsterite and enstatite. But in my study though forsterite is appearing at temperatures as per literature but enstatite is appearing as low intense broad peaks earlier than reported in literature. We think it is because of the fine scale time heating done than previous studies which mainly focused on heating at a particular time. 

      The second part of the question is though I am interested in different pO2, I don't have time to do right now since I will have to submit my thesis soon. If given a chance to set my own lab in the future, I would definitely be putting up such projects. It's a long term goal. 

      Reply

      • AC2: Reply to AC1, R.Valli Divya, 06 May 2026 Reply

        Powder samples are micrometer sized grinded by mortar and pestle. Some studies have done using mortar and pestle powders but they have reported enstatite at higher temperatures at a fixed holding time but some studies have just mentioned powders so it can be ball milled or different techniques available. There should be a detailed study on time, temperature and grain size all influences but it can be very time-consuming to do the experiments. 

        Reply

      • AC3: Reply to AC1, R.Valli Divya, 06 May 2026 Reply

        Powder samples are micrometer sized grinded by mortar and pestle. Some studies have done using mortar and pestle powders but they have reported enstatite at higher temperatures at a fixed holding time but some studies have just mentioned powders so it can be ball milled or different techniques available. There should be a detailed study on time, temperature and grain size all influences but it can be very time-consuming to do the experiments. 

        Reply

Post a comment