Abstract
Segregation of the iron core from rocky silicates is a massive evolutionary event in planetary accretion, yet the process of metal segregation remains obscure, due to obstacles in simulating the extreme physical properties of liquid iron and silicates at finite length scales. We present new experimental results studying gravitational instability of an emulsified liquid gallium layer, initially at rest at the interface between two glucose solutions. Metal settling coats liquid metal drops with a film of low density material. The emulsified metal pond descends as a coherent Rayleigh−Taylor instability with a trailing fluid-filled conduit. Scaling to planetary interiors and high pressure mineral experiments indicates that molten silicates and volatiles are entrained toward the iron core and initiate buoyant thermochemical plumes that later oxidize and hydrate the upper mantle. Surface volcanism from thermochemical plumes releases oxygen and volatiles linking atmospheric growth to the Earth’s mantle and core processes.
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Introduction
Formation of iron cores and differentiation of terrestrial planets1,2,3 occurred rapidly, in only 10–30 My3,4,5, yet the style of iron descent to the core remains unknown. The process and path of iron descent has direct bearing on the chemical and thermal evolution of the mantle and core of all terrestrial planets. Planetary materials originally formed from dust and gas that condensed into particles within an accretionary disk6. Particles began to collide and clumped together forming kilometer-sized meteorites and small planetesimals. Differentiation began at this early stage by decay of radio nuclides, 26Al and 60Fe7. Heating from radioactive decay occurred at low pressure conditions within the mantles of small planetesimals. Planetesimals gradually increased in size (to hundreds of kilometers) where mantle temperatures would have reached ~2000 °K and ~20 GPA pressure8. Viscous dissipation from differentiation and descent of iron would have increased local mantle temperatures near the path of descent2, 9. As planetary embryos grew in size, silicate viscosities in the vicinity of impacts would have lowered due to localized impact heating and iron descent, but the bulk mantle viscosity would have been controlled by the peridotite solidus that is a strong function of pressure10,11,12. The combined effect of the decrease in the abundance of radio nuclides and the increase in bulk mantle pressures would have caused interior mantle temperatures to cool and viscosities to increase.
Impact collisions grew more infrequent but larger with time, becoming more violent causing partial melting of the impactor and target surface. The energetics and melting from moderate-sized impacts would have formed transient magma oceans or magma reservoirs2, 5, 13. The rheological base of the magma ocean is defined by melt fractions below 60%, at which depth, settling iron drops will pond14. We consider shallow (less than a few 100 km depth) magma oceans (see Discussion).
The mantles and cores of planetesimals previously differentiated by 26Al and 60Fe decay7 may have fragmented before merging with the proto-core of the planet15, 16. The late stages of bombardment may have involved a wide range of impact sizes. Fragmentation and breakup may be limited for giant impacts17, but these two processes are very likely to occur during impacts involving differentiated planetesimals and protoplanets. Once inside the magma ocean, turbulent mixing acts to shear liquid iron into smaller droplets17,18,19,20,21,22. The iron droplets will settle and accumulate in a metal pond at the base of the magma ocean23, at a depth where the silicate mantle is significantly more viscous14 due to growth of planetary radii and increasing mantle pressures.
While breakup of iron into drops during impacts seems probable, the nature of iron droplet descent to the core is not obvious. Iron descent to the core by percolation of liquid iron drops through a solid silicate matrix is a possibility, but is inhibited by large dihedral angles1, 24 and requires long, rather than short, core formation times. Metal percolation through solid silicate via interconnected networks is more likely in the lower mantle where shear stresses are higher10, 25, 26. The descent of liquid iron through fractures27, 28 has been proposed in the lower mantle if liquid metal−silicate viscosity contrasts are high. Large metal diapirs that form from Rayleigh−Taylor instabilities1, 27 are consistent with rapid core formation, but large metal diapirs would have residence times too short and surface area too small for wide spread metal−silicate equilibration in the upper mantle29. Here we consider the descent of metal diapirs consisting of emulsified liquid metal which simultaneously provides rapid core formation times and ample residence time for chemical equilibration at high pressures.
The main phase of accretion and iron descent in the Earth likely occurred in a reduced environment30. Trace element abundances of highly siderophile elements pervasive in the Earth’s upper mantle31, 32 indicate partial metal−silicate equilibration and suggest low oxygen fugacity prior to metal descent to the core13, 33,34,35,36. Atmospheric hydrogen was removed after the solar nebula dissipated37. Oxidation and hydration of the mantle is considered to be a later event, coming from several possible sources including hydrogen degassing or late stage arrival of highly hydrated and oxidized meteorites6. The “late veneer” model proposes that highly siderophile elements, volatiles, and oxides were added as the last few percent of Earth’s accretionary process38. An external model for this late veneer suggests migration of meteorites into outer asteroid belts beyond the snow line and later migration back towards the Earth39. An internal model suggests that disproportionation reactions involving perovskite produce Fe+3 in the lower mantle, which is then transported into the upper mantle by convection33. Late stage increase in mantle oxidation may also contribute to the late appearance of the oxygen atmosphere37, 40. Recent petrologic methods using vanadium as an oxybarometer41 indicates the rise in atmospheric oxygen is a gradual process leading up to the great oxygen event42 and may be linked to mantle convective processes or inner core growth.
Here we present the results of laboratory experiments using liquid metal gallium and glucose solutions to model the formation and gravitational instability of emulsified metal ponds in silicate magma oceans. Physical experiments using liquid metal have several advantages over numerical simulations2, 43, such as 3D geometry, multi-scale dynamics including turbulence, and the contrasting properties of surface tension, viscosity, and other rheological properties of liquid metal and viscous mantle silicates in planetary interiors. We show that emulsified metal ponds undergo Rayleigh−Taylor instabilities, forming metal-rich diapirs with trailing conduits. During planetary accretion, these metal-rich structures descend through the mantle entraining silicates and volatiles and deliver low density elements to the core. This mechanism provides an internally consistent model for rapid core formation, which first removes volatiles and oxides from the mantle, temporarily sequestering them in the core, and later returns them back to the upper mantle and atmosphere.
Results
Initial and experimental conditions
Our experiments model the evolution of an emulsified metal pond that settles within a magma ocean during or following a moderate-sized impact. The experiment is designed to characterize the boundary between a liquid metal layer overlying a viscous silicate mantle that is at or near the peridotite solidus3, 14 as described above. The underlying viscous mantle in our model assumes some degree of pre-differentiation due to melting from radioactive decay and metal−silicate segregation6. While a magma reservoir is expected to form from small- to moderate-sized impacts, our experiments are not intended to model the very largest, whole-planet melting impacts which involves core merging15. However, our experiments describe the state and growth of the target proto-core with entrained silicates that would be present before and after merging of a large differentiation event.
A set of 34 laboratory experiments44, listed in Table 1, show gravitational instability of a pond consisting of emulsified liquid metal droplets (layer m) resting at the interface between a high viscosity fluid (S2) and low viscosity fluid (S1) as shown in Fig. 1. Non-dimensional parameters scaling our experiments to planetary interiors are described in Methods and Table 2. In each experimental case we vary a single parameter such as the viscosity of S1 or S2, thickness of the liquid metal pond (indirectly varying the radius of the metal diapir), or emulsion droplet size while holding all other properties fixed. Experiments test a wide range of densities for ρ1 and ρ2 (see Table 1). We choose ρ1 based on the range of densities estimated by petrologic studies of chondritic crustal melts45. Experiments presented here focus on the case of an emulsified liquid metal pond that forms by fragmentation and melting of small planetesimals on impact and turbulent mixing within a magma ocean (described above); however, there may be impact scenarios of moderate-sized meteorites with pre-formed cores that release partial volumes of liquid metal that are not significantly disturbed nor emulsified and which pool at the base of a magma ocean1, 3, 27. To consider this case, in four experiments (see Table 1) we also compare a coalesced smooth metal pond (Fig. 1b) to an emulsified metal pond (Fig. 1c).
Descent of emulsified and smooth metal diapirs
The major stages of formation and descent of a liquid metal diapir are shown in Figs. 1 and 2. Four stages of diapir descent and plume growth are observed in all emulsified experiments. We identify two stages of metal diapir descent and two stages of thermochemical plume ascent described here and in the next section. Emulsified liquid metal droplets (m) settle through a low viscosity and low density S1 fluid layer and are quickly coated with a film of low density S1 material (Fig. 2a inset) before coming to rest as a pond of coated metal droplets at the S1−S2 interface. (1) Stage 1 descent describes gravitational instability of the metal pond layer (Fig. 1d–f, Supplementary Fig. 1a) which generates a downwelling that collects quickly into a large nascent diapir of emulsified droplets (Figs. 1c and 2b). Metal droplets far from the initial downwelling site remain at the S1−S2 interface. The process of diapir formation in stage 1 is very similar to the smooth metal case (Fig. 1b); however in the smooth metal case, all of the ponded metal descends into the initial diapir.
Formation of trailing conduits
Slow relaxation of the surrounding viscous S2 material causes S1 fluid to fill in the depression behind the sinking metal diapir, forming a conduit that is dragged downward (Fig. 2c, d). Circulation within the conduit walls and in the fluid surrounding the descending diapir is measured using particle tracking (see Fig. 3) and is shown to flatten the top of the metal diapir into a lower hemispherical shape (see Methods). (2) Stage 2 descent is observed as a second group of emulsified metal droplets slides down the evolving topography (Fig. 2c) at the S1−S2 interface towards the conduit. The delayed descent of droplets in stage 2 only occurs in emulsified metal pond experiments (Fig. 1c) and is not observed in smooth metal pond cases (Fig. 1b). This difference is due to the S1 film layer that coats each droplet in the former case. Droplets close to the initial downwelling site descend down steep topography at the S1−S2 interface created by the large initial downwelling. Coated droplets far from the initial downwelling site rest on approximately horizontal topography and maintain smaller masses that do not significantly depress the topography, lingering longer at the interface before descent. In the case of a smooth metal layer (Fig. 1b), the metal pond coalesces rapidly into a single large mass flowing quickly to form the initial downwelling (due to the extreme low viscosity and high density of liquid metal) with large negative buoyancy initiating descent in stage 1.
Growth of thermochemical plumes
The conduit begins to collapse once the diapir reaches the base of the S2 fluid. Conduit fluid (S1) then reverses flow direction, separating from the metal droplets in the diapir and ascending through the conduit as a soliton46 as shown in Fig. 2e. (3) Stage 3 ascent is observed as the soliton rises (Supplementary Fig. 1b-d), meets the sinking metal droplets of descent stage 2 (Fig. 2e) and is forced out of the conduit (Fig. 2f) forming a chemically buoyant plume that rises to the surface along a new trajectory (consistent with Stokes velocity as shown in Supplementary Fig. 2). This exit of the chemically buoyant plume from the conduit is observed in all emulsion case experiments (see Supplementary Figs. 1 and 2). The influence of possible edge effects is determined using particle tracking methods and shown to be negligible (see Methods and Fig. 3c). After exiting the conduit, the chemically buoyant plume forms a spherical diapir with a thin tail, rising to the S1−S2 interface where it erupts into the S1 layer. The nature of the large plume head in stage 3 with a very thin tail results from the extreme viscosity ratios between the chemical plume and surrounding material47.
The second group of metal droplets continues its descent, adding to the pile of liquid metal at the base of S2 fluid (Fig. 2f). Topography of the basal metal layer is maintained in our experiments for >30 hours (Fig. 2h) due to the resistance of coated metal droplets to coalesce. (4) Stage 4 ascent is observed when the S1 film layer surrounding each metal droplet slowly segregates and migrates buoyantly out of the liquid metal pile forming late-stage plumelets (Fig. 2h). Some of the larger plumelets ascend along individual paths but most rise in merged trajectories, as packets or waves. Volume measurements of entrainment indicate that the bulk of the entrained S1 material is released slowly over time, but a very small volume is always retained in the liquid metal matrix.
Experimental measurements and scaling
Linear stability theory for three layer fluids48 predicts our experimental system is gravitationally unstable; however, the onset time for the classical Rayleigh−Taylor instability49(solid lines) given by
under-predicts the onset times of the instabilities in our experiments (Fig. 4a). If Eq. (1) is modified to include the effect of all layers including the finite thickness of layer S1 (see Methods), an improved fit is obtained, as shown by the shaded area in Fig. 4a.
The terminal velocity (U) of descending diapirs (Fig. 4b) in all experiments is observed to be faster than predicted by Stokes theory (solid lines). We add an additional term to the classical Stokes velocity (first term) which accounts for the reduced drag (second bracket) due to the presence of a conduit at the trailing side of the descending liquid metal sphere (see discussion and derivation in Methods).
where θ is the angle between the vertical axis of the diapir and outer conduit wall and n = rc/rm (see Fig. 5). Drag forces are maximum for shear stresses along stream lines which circulate around a perfect sphere during descent, but will be reduced if obstructed by the presence of a conduit on the trailing side of the sphere. The last term considers the mass of a trailing conduit (where rc is conduit radius) and hc is conduit height. The theoretical prediction given by Eq. (2) is shown in Fig. 4b (dashed lines). The departure of the diapir velocity from classical Stokes velocity (solid lines) increases systematically with hm (which indirectly increases diapir radius, rm, once the metal pond goes unstable). Close fit with the theoretical prediction suggests that the increase in conduit radius (represented by θ), which forms behind each descending diapir, is the dominant factor controlling higher descent velocities.
Conduit behavior
To study the formation of a conduit, we measure the change in average conduit radius versus time for the case of a smooth metal pond (Fig. 4c) and the case of an emulsified metal pond (Fig. 4d). Three distinct slopes indicate three regimes of conduit behavior for the case of a smooth metal diapir50 (Fig. 4c). In regime 1, conduits form as the metal diapirs descend. Conduit radius, governed by the leading metal diapir, is largest when the metal diapir first forms (Fig. 1b), and decreases in radius rapidly as it sinks to the base. Regime 2 marks conduit collapse due to the reversal of conduit material as S1 fluid rises up buoyantly through the conduit after the metal diapir reaches the base (open square) and stops sinking. The collapse rate is controlled by S1 buoyancy. The reduction in conduit radius is slower than during regime 1. In regime 3 thin conduits collapse slowly (displaying a shallow slope) after most of the S1 fluid has exited and includes slow diffusion with the surrounding S2 material. Thin conduits (regime 3) are observed to persist, however, for long times.
Conduit behavior for the case of an emulsified metal pond is shown in Fig. 4d. The steep slope identifying the rapid decrease in conduit radius due to rapid descent of the metal diapir is clearly observed in regime 1 and is similar to conduit behavior for the smooth diapir in Fig. 4c. The very shallow slope observed in regime 3 indicates very slow collapse of the conduit similar to regime 3 for a smooth metal diapir (Fig. 4c). However, the intermediate slope of regime 2 observed for a smooth metal diapir (Fig. 4c) is not observed for the case of an emulsified diapir in Fig. 4d. The absence of regime 2 indicates that the return flow of conduit material does not occur within the conduit. This is shown in Fig. 2e where buoyant material rises briefly in the conduit as a soliton and exits the conduit forming a chemically buoyant plume that rises to the surface along an independent pathway. We find that the amount of S1 fluid entrained into an emulsified metal diapir is controlled by the size of metal droplets (Fig. 6a) and S1 viscosity (μ1); larger thermochemical plumes result from smaller rm and larger μ1 (Fig. 6b). The longevity of a conduit is described by the average constriction time and given in previous studies43 by \(t_{\mathrm{c}} = \mu _2{\mathrm{/}}\left({{\mathrm{\Delta }}\rho _{2 - 1}gr_{\mathrm{c}}} \right)\). Constriction time of a conduit trailing behind an emulsified diapir depends on μ2 and Δρ, as shown in Fig. 7a, and is longer than theoretical predictions18 for a smooth metal pond (solid line) by a factor of ∼2, indicating internal circulation within the emulsified diapir is not efficient and retains S1 buoyant fluid.
Discussion
Extrapolation of our experiments to the Earth’s mantle depends on how magma coats liquid iron droplets and their interfacial tension (IFT). We measure IFT in our experiments (see Methods), which causes S1 fluid to adhere to metal droplets and we obtain IFT = 642 mN/m. Liquid Fe 51, 52 at 1570–1823 °K and silicate magma53 gives \({\mathrm{IFT}}_{\gamma _{\mathrm{m}} - \gamma _1}\) ≈ |1720−350| = 1370 mN/m indicating that coating of iron droplets by molten silicate magma in the Earth is stronger than in our experiments. The resistance of magma-coated metal droplets to coalesce and the rapid growth of the pond instability (Figs. 1d and 4a) suggests that silicates in the magma film may remain chemically isolated from the magma ocean as the diapir forms during stage 1 descent. The metal pond instability time is the rate controlling process for metal descent. The time for gravitational instability of a metal pond to form a metal diapir is estimated using Eq. (5) (for hm in the range 1–10 km and μ2 in the range 1018–1021 Pa ⋅ s) giving 0.045–45 Ky. Time for growth of this instability is significantly shorter than magma ocean cooling times estimated in recent numerical models54 and suggests that metal ponds go unstable and descend quickly, and may sequester O, H, other volatiles, or enriched elements within the film layer. These estimates use a lower bound for hm and upper bound for μ2 emphasizing that growth of the instability is significantly shorter than magma ocean cooling times even with larger metal volumes or lower viscosities.
The entrainment volume is much smaller than the silicate/metal mass fraction of ~10/1 required for partial equilibration estimated from isotopic ratios and siderophile abundances13. We observe entrainment indicating estimated mass fractions that range from 1/5 to 2/5 indicating a finite silicate mass that limits the amount of metal−silicate chemical transfer55 in stage 1. In contrast, stage 2 metal droplets are delayed and more dispersed in the magma, allowing for more chemical transfer. The amount of siderophiles (including tungsten), per unit metal mass, extracted from silicates can be far smaller during stage 1 compared to stage 2 (see Supplementary Note 1) complicating the interpretation of core formation time4 in terms of Hf-W systematics. Small residual particles19 (<0.1 cm in Fig. 2g) remain at the S1−S2 interface; re-mixed would also contribute to upper mantle siderophile abundances3, 33. Partitioning of O, S, and other species between magma and metal droplets (inset Fig. 2a) within the descending diapir and during stage 2 metal descent (Fig. 2c) provides a source of light elements for the core.
The stability of a conduit during iron diapir descent is estimated by comparing the conduit constriction time, tc (Fig. 7a) to metal pond instability time, tonset (Methods), and diapir descent time (from Eq. (2)), depicted in Fig. 7b. Conduits stay open to depths ranging from 1000 to 2300 km depending on diapir radius, rdiapir, and θ. This suggests that high pressure and temperature partition coefficients33, 34 for siderophile abundance and oxidation may apply to the equilibrium within a conduit, rather than an extraordinarily deep magma ocean16, 56. High pressures in the lower mantle will have the effect of increasing mantle viscosity, as shown in Fig. 7a, and to delay conduit closure behind descending metal diapirs.
We suggest that the silicate phase within a trailing conduit may be at least partially molten. While descent of large metal diapirs is shown to cause shear heating in the surrounding mantle9, 36, numerical studies of descending emulsified metal droplets indicate that heat is generated in both the metal and silicate by viscous dissipation57 and induces a ~1000 °K temperature increase in the metal phase that super heats the core. High pressure shock compression experiments58 indicate that these temperatures maintain silicates above the liquidus at core-mantle boundary (CMB) pressures (see Supplementary Note 2). Therefore silicates entrained within conduits of emulsified diapirs descending to CMB depths may exist as partial melt.
Extraction of silicate melt from metal piles formed at the CMB cools the core and may initiate and contribute to generation of the dynamo. Entrainment within the metal diapir delivers light elements to the core. The bulk density of the emulsified diapir dictates that it will descend below the CMB but the coated metal drops may distribute and reside at the top of the outer core creating temporary stratification due to buoyancy contrasts with heavier coalesced iron metal below (see Fig. 8b). Subsequent migration of the entrained silicate material out of the core maintains the dynamo and may be independent of giant impacts or inner core growth59,60,61. Prolonged residency of soluble light elements may dissolve in the outer core.
Our experiments show that the silicate melt entrained in the diapir segregates from the liquid iron phase in the conduit and at the CMB once the iron diapir enters the core. At this point, viscous heating ceases and the silicate melt cools by conduction. We compare conductive cooling times to advection where magma cooling times of 30–800 My (assuming thermal diffusivity, κ = 10−6 m2/s, and the radius of a thermochemical plume, rthch > 50 km) are consistent or longer than the total time for diapir descent and thermochemical plume advection and ascent of 30–60 My (assuming rm = 200–500 km, rthch ~ 150 km). This suggests that upwelling thermochemical plumes may consist of at least partial melt. The density anomaly of a thermochemical plume, Δρ = ρ2−ρ1, ranges from 700 to 2000 kg/m3 and is significantly larger than a purely thermal mantle plume where Δρ typically varies from 10 to 100 kg/m3, implying that large chemically buoyant plumes rise rapidly, and are therefore little affected by solid-state thermal convection currents.
Arrival of a large thermochemical plume at the Earth’s surface would initiate volcanism and large igneous plateaus (Fig. 8). Oxygen and hydrous phases from the first large pulses of volcanism (ascent stage 3) are likely to escape the early weak atmosphere of the Earth37. The rise of plumelets in stage 4 (Fig. 8b) occurs over a longer duration ranging from 50 to 100 core formation times in our experiments. Scaling to the Earth suggests mantle plumelets (ascent stage 4, Fig. 2h) migrate out of the iron core matrix and rise slowly to the surface, consistent with Large Low Shear Velocity Provinces62 (see discussion of LLSPV structures in Supplementary Note 3), to oxidize and hydrate the upper mantle over 0.5 – 5.0 By. Out-gassing from volcanism of oxidized mantle elements may contribute to the rise of atmospheric oxygen.
Volcanic out-gassing from oxidized plumelet material would then contribute to the rise of atmospheric oxygen over many hundreds of millions of years. This is consistent with a gradual accumulation of atmosphere O2, leading up to the great oxygen event 2.3 Ga37 and is consistent with recent petrologic studies41, 42 that indicate mantle convective processes may contribute to atmospheric growth.
Methods
Initial conditions
The initial conditions in each experiment consist of three fluid layers, which model the Earth’s surface after a meteorite impact during accretion63. The experimental setup (Fig. 1a) consists of a top layer (S1) which represents the low viscosity silicate magma ocean and the lower layer (S2) which represents the viscous solid silicate mantle. A thin layer of emulsified liquid metal droplets (m) rests at the S1−S2 interface and represents liquid iron broken into droplets14, 35. All glucose solutions used for the two component fluid system are Newtonian. Fluid 1 (S1) consists of a diluted glucose solution. Fluid 2 (S2) is dehydrated by evaporation to produce highly viscous glucose solutions. Liquid gallium is immiscible with glucose solutions and demonstrates high density, low viscosity, and low melting temperature at ~30 °C making it useful for laboratory studies of planetary core dynamics. The buoyancy differences for our lab materials are compared to terrestrial planetary mantles in Table 2 and discussed below. Prior to each experiment, gallium is warmed and melted in a water bath at 30 °C and then mixed with S1 solution and agitated to form emulsion droplets. Small droplets broken up individually by release into glucose solutions through a syringe produces the same effect but is less time efficient. The surface tension of liquid gallium depends linearly on temperatures64 giving 707 dyne/cm at 30 °C (see Table 2). Surface tension for glucose solutions, measured using a contact angle analyzer at the University of California Los Angeles Fluid Mechanics Engineering laboratory, is mildly dependent on viscosity at 65 mN/m for μ1 = 0.04 Pa ⋅ s and 89 mN/m for μ1 = 156 Pa ⋅ s. The experimental tank has dimensions 12 cm×12 cm×30 cm with a copper base and four 1 cm thick Plexiglass sides. All experiments are conducted with an initial gallium layer thickness (hm) of 0.25 cm and an S2 layer depth of ~25 cm (except when testing the thickness of these layers).
Experiments are all conducted at constant temperature. Each experiment duration varies from several days to a few weeks and varies one physical parameter while holding all other properties fixed. The major features and stages of a liquid metal diapir descent shown in Fig. 2 are observed in all 21 experiments which consider an emulsified metal pond with only minor variations in conduit radius (rc), boundary layer growth rates, and descent/ascent velocities between experiments. Several types of visualization and lighting techniques are used. Plain light shines a light behind the experiment and illuminates the metal (descending) diapir best. Shadowgraphs resolve subtle density differences in the fluid (invisible to the naked eye) by light refraction and are used to visualize the small density contrasts between the conduit, thermochemical plumes, and S2 fluids.
Non-dimensional parameters
Dimensionless parameters scale experiments to planetary interiors. The Reynolds number (Re), describes the ratio of inertial forces to viscous forces, and is defined as
where ρ is the density of the droplet, diapir, or plume, U is the particle velocity, L is the length scale defined as rdroplet, the radius of the droplet, diapir, or plume, and μ is the viscosity of the surrounding fluid. Small Re < 1 is governed by the Stokes flow regime where viscous forces dominate and inertial forces are negligible. For Re > 1, inertial forces dominate over viscous forces. The Reynolds number in the Earth silicate mantle (ReS2) is on the order of 10−23–10−18 for a metal diapir (see Table 2). Although the Re for metal diapirs in our experiments are larger, ranging from 2.9×10−7 to 1.9×10−6, the Reynolds number is small, Re << 1, in both systems indicating that viscous forces dominate and inertial forces are negligible providing appropriate scaling for planetary interiors. The Rethch for rising chemical plumes in our experiments is between 5.5×10−11 and 4.6×10−8 compared to smaller values of 10−21−10−17 expected in planetary interiors. Both systems, however, are governed by the Stokes flow regime, Re << 1, where viscous forces dominate and inertial forces are unimportant. We also define a Reynolds number for descending droplets in the S1 layer where ReS1 ranges from 10−2 to 102 in our experiments and spans the same range of values below and above the Stokes flow regime (see Table 2) that may be expected within a planetary magma ocean14.
The Bond number (B) determines the shape of the metal droplet or diapir and is defined by the ratio of buoyancy forces to surface tension. The Bond number is given by
where Δρ is the density contrast between the droplet or diapir and surrounding S2 fluid, g is gravitational acceleration, r is the radius of the droplet or diapir, and γ is the surface tension of the metal droplet in S2. In the case B > 1, buoyancy forces overcome surface tension and the droplet or diapir will deform from a spherical shape. Descending diapirs in our experiments (Table 2) have Bdiapir = 8–50 and although this is smaller than the range expected in planetary mantles of 102–1015, Bond numbers are large, B > 1, in both systems indicating that buoyancy forces dominate over surface tension and metal diapirs will deform from a spherical shape in the Earth. This is exemplified by the hemispheric shape of diapirs observed in our experiments (Figs. 1 and 2). We find that conduit radius (represented by θ) increases for large B diapirs and reduces the drag around the diapir (see Supplement) traditionally assumed in the Stokes velocity case65. Bdroplet defined for individual metal droplets is small, ranging from 10−3 to 10−1, in our experiments consistent with B expected for an emulsified metal pond35 within a magma ocean ranging from 10−2–100 indicating that surface tension dominates and droplets remain spherical. The density difference (ρ2−ρ1) is lower in our experiments compared to the Earth’s interiors45, 66 (see Table 2). The density difference (ρm−ρ2) is slightly higher in our experiments than observed for planetary interiors. The consistency of our data with theoretical predictions over a wide range of μ2 and Δρ, shown in Fig. 7a, suggests the ratio of these parameters in our results is applicable to planetary interiors. Assumptions for ρ1 used in Fig. 7b range from 2850 to 3700 kg/m3 obtained from previous studies45, 66 which estimate the density of chondritic silicate melts and the pressure dependence of silicate melt density in the deep Earth. This range of ρ1 does not affect the conduit closure depth significantly as ρ1 appears in both terms for diapir descent velocity (U) and constriction time18.
The onset time for the gravitational instability of the metal layer (Fig. 4a) is faster than predicted for a classic Rayleigh−Taylor instability. The classic Rayleigh−Taylor instability (shown by the solid line in Fig. 4a) is given in Eq. (1) from previous studies49. This classical treatment considers a single dense layer of thickness, hm, overlying a viscous medium. The fit is improved if we also consider the finite thickness of the h1 layer (S1), which overlies and descends with the hm layer, leading to
The additional term in the denominator accounts for the mass of both the h1 and hm layers as well as displacement of additional mass in the underlying S2 layer suggesting a multi-stratified layer participates in the instability as observed in our experiments. Equation (5) provides a better theoretical fit (shaded area in Fig. 4a) to the observed data compared to the classical prediction (solid line) which assumes a single layer of instability overlying a fluid half-space.
Experimental measurements
We measure the dynamic IFT between two fluids by using the Drop Volume Method. Here we submerge a capillary tube filled with gallium below the surface of a container filled with S1 fluid. As the liquid metal is released, the drop grows at a rate modulated by the capillary wall separation, gravity, and the density difference with the surrounding fluid, (γIFT = VdropΔρgπ/d). The volume (Vdrop) is measured by the largest drop radius before it detaches from the tube. We measure IFT in our experiments, which causes S1 fluid to adhere to metal droplets, by the Drop Volume method giving ~500 mN/m. We predict the IFT for our fluids using the Antonoff Rule (the absolute difference in surface tension, γ, between each fluid) giving γm−γ1 ≈ 642 mN/m, only a slightly larger IFT than our measurement. Antonoff’s Rule applied to planetary interiors with Fe liquid51, 52 at 1570–1823 °K and silicate magma53 gives \({\mathrm{IFT}}_{\gamma _{\mathrm{m}} - \gamma _1}\) ≈ |1720−350| = 1370 mN/m.
The average conduit radius (Fig. 4c, d) is measured in each photograph by dividing the full length of the conduit into 20 rectangular sub-sections. The width of each box gives the average diameter of that sub-section. The average conduit diameter for one time shot is obtained by taking the average width of the sub-sections. The constriction time of a conduit44, 50 shown in Fig. 7a is defined by the time interval from the opening of a conduit67 when a diapir is fully formed (defining Rstart) to the time when the conduit radius stops changing significantly44, 67 (Fig. 2d). Descent stage 2 is not observed in the case of a smooth metal pond50. In the case of a smooth metal diapir (Fig. 1b) all conduit material travels down in the initial diapir and returns upwards within the conduit after the diapir reaches the base. For an emulsified metal pond, ascent stage 3 begins with a soliton46 that forms at the base and is forced out of the conduit (Supplementary Fig. 1). Our experiments indicate that collision of ascent stage 3 and descent stage 2 is predicted for planetary interiors, as the second stage of droplets will always follow the conduit walls which is a lower energy path than vertical descent through the solid silicate mantle. Likewise, ascent stage 3 will initially ascend through the existing diapir-formed conduit (Fig. 2e and Supplementary Fig. 1) opposed to any other higher energy path through the solid lower mantle (Fig. 8). Core forming metal−silicate plume events may occur one or multiple times during planetary formation collecting within a metal pond until it becomes sufficiently unstable and forming a gravitational instability and descending as a diapir to the core.
We test for edge effects in our experimental tank using particle image velocimetry imaging techniques (Fig. 3), which shows return flow around the diapir extends a distance approximately equal to the diapir radius. The width of the box is more than two times this distance in all experiments indicating that edge effects from our tank are negligible.
We do not directly account for pressure effects in our experiments. The extreme physical properties of liquid metal and silicate, however, are difficult to model directly in numerical simulations16, 43, 68 at length scales which consider break up or emulsification of liquid iron. High pressures in the lower mantle will have the strongest effect of increasing mantle viscosity (The magnitude of the increase in density is subtle by comparison). We show in Fig. 4a that increasing the ambient layer viscosity, S2 (or mantle viscosity) will slow the relaxation time to close the fluid-filled conduit. Numerical simulations36 as well as theoretical work studying Rayleigh−Taylor instabilities27 indicate that viscosities of 1023 Pa ⋅ s are not sufficient to prevent large metal diapirs (with a buoyancy difference ρm−ρ2 ≥ 2000 kg/m3) from descending to the core. (The range of buoyancy differences in our experiments are consistent with lower mantle values, see Table 1.) Mantle viscosities in the early Earth are suggested to be even lower (1018−21 Pa ⋅ s) during accretion14 and would have the effect of increasing iron diapir descent velocities (compare Fig. 7b for μ = 1023 to Supplementary Fig. 3 for μ = 1021). Increased mantle viscosities in the lower mantle will respond slower to a magma-filled conduit that forms behind a large descending metal diapir delaying collapse of the conduit due to slowed viscous relaxation. The depth to which we can expect conduits to survive ranges from 1000 to 2300 km (see Fig. 7b) depending on diapir radius. Numerical studies57 of liquid iron descent through the mantle show that viscous dissipation causes heating of iron and silicates reaching temperatures sufficient to maintain silicate melt during descent through the mantle adiabat and at CMB pressures. The liquidus for mantle peridotite at lower mantle and CMB pressures is obtained by high pressure mineral studies58 using shock compression techniques and indicates the increased temperatures due to viscous dissipation lie above the liquidus during descent to the core (see discussion). Cooling times for molten silicates at the CMB may be protracted by as much as 3 By (see Supplementary Note 2) if thermal diffusivity is temperature-dependent69. High pressures are also shown to increase dissolution of Si and O in liquid Fe70.
Reduced drag due to the presence of a conduit
We account for the reduced drag around a descending metal diapir due to the presence of a trailing conduit67. We first consider pressure drag (Dp) and begin by assuming the contact point of the conduit wall with the sphere makes an angle, θ, with the vertical axis of the spherical metal drop (see Fig. 5). The component of the pressure along the direction of movement of the sphere is given by pcosθ. We use a ring surface element in spherical coordinates taking advantage of symmetry about the radius (a = rdiapir). This simplifies to a single integral
where θ is kept in the integral limit because the drag forces acting on the diapir will depend on the conduit radius θ. The pressure at r = a for an inviscid sphere65 depends on viscosity (μ2),
where U is the uniform flow field surrounding the sphere during descent. Solving for pcosθ and substituting into (6) yields
Integrating gives an expression for Dp in terms of θ
Viscous drag (Dv) can be expressed mathematically as the sum of the viscous stresses (τ) along the surface of the sphere. For an inviscid sphere, the component of viscous stress in the θ direction (Fig. 5) is zero. Thus the viscous drag is the sum of the components of viscous stress in the radial (r) direction
Radial stresses (τ rr ) depend on the change in velocity, ur in the radial direction
For an inviscid sphere which has boundary conditions at r = a where radial velocities, u r = 0, tangential stresses, τ rθ = 0 vanish, it can be shown that
Substituting (11) and (12) into (10) and simplifying gives
Integrating with respect to θ gives
Pressure drag (9) opposes the direction of viscous drag (14) and can be combined giving an expression for the total drag on the diapir,
Below we consider the sum of forces acting on the diapir including the mass of the diapir, mass of the conduit c, the buoyancy of the diapir with respect to S2, the buoyancy of the conduit with respect to S2, and the drag forces derived above
shown as
Solving for velocity, U, gives
where rm is metal diapir radius and V is volume. Expanding and combining like terms gives
where rc is conduit radius and hc is conduit height. If the conduit radius is written as a fraction (n) of diapir radius, rc = nrm, this reduces to
This can be simplified and written in terms of the Stokes classical velocity as
The first term is the classical expression of Stokes velocity for an inviscid sphere, the second bracket describes reduced drag due to the presence of a conduit, and the last term represents the mass of the conduit and displacement of S2 fluid.
Our results indicate that conduit radius, represented by θ, is the biggest factor influencing diapir descent velocities. Diapirs with larger Bond number (see Methods above) cause larger diapir shape distortion from a sphere displaying flatter, wider trailing edges, entrain wider conduits and have larger θ as shown in Fig. 4b. We set an average value for the factor n = 0.3 in Fig. 4b. If mantle viscosities were smaller (e.g. μ2~1022 Pa ⋅ s), diapirs descend faster (in less than 2 Ma, see Supplementary Fig. 3), increasing core formation times, but the relaxation time of μ2 to close conduits also increases and they stay open to about the same depth as shown in Fig. 7b.
Coefficients due to form drag (or shape change) of the metal diapir are not yet considered, but this would only reduce the predicted velocity. We show that diapirs descend much faster than the Stokes velocity prediction, indicating that reduced drag due to the presence of a conduit, represented in Eq. (2), is the dominant factor governing our experimental observations for increased diapir velocities.
Data availability
All relevant data are available from the authors.
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Acknowledgements
This work was funded by NSF-EAR CAREER #1151941 and NASA-MFRP #0071 to Weeraratne at CSUN and NSF-EAR #110371 to Olson at JHU. We thank Paul Asimow for helpful comments.
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J.R.F. performed all emulsified metal experiments, created all final figures, and wrote the first draft of several sections of the manuscripts. C.T.N. performed experiments with smooth metal ponds. The final writing was done by D.S.W. Theory and discussion was developed collaboratively with D.S.W., C.L.R., J.R.F., and D.B. C.L.R. created Fig. 7b and derived the theory for Eq. (2) shown and in Supplementary Material. Experiments for Fig. 6b were performed by S.M.K. and J.M.M. J.M.R. made Fig. 3 and performed PIV measurements and analysis for fluid experiments run by C.M. Photograph in Supplementary Fig. 1a by C.M. Discussions with P.O. clarified the text.
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Fleck, J.R., Rains, C.L., Weeraratne, D.S. et al. Iron diapirs entrain silicates to the core and initiate thermochemical plumes. Nat Commun 9, 71 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-02503-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-02503-2
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