Magnesium self-diffusion coefficients were determined experimentally for diffusion parallel to each of the three crystallographic
directions in natural orthoenstatite (En
88Fs
12). Experiments were conducted at 1 atm in CO-CO
2 gas mixing furnaces, which provided oxygen fugacities equivalent to the iron-wüstite buffer. Diffusion of
25Mg was induced in polished samples of oriented orthoenstatite using a film of isotopically enriched
25MgO as the source material. Very short (<0.15 μm) diffusional penetration profiles were measured by ion microprobe depth profiling.
The diffusion coefficients determined for four temperatures (900, 850, 800, 750 °C) provide the activation energies,
E
a
, and frequency factors,
D
o, where
D =
D
o exp (−
E
a
/
RT) for Mg self-diffusion parallel to each crystallographic direction:
a-axis,
E
a
= 360 ± 52 kJ/mole and
D
o = 1.10 × 10
−4 m
2/s;
b-axis,
E
a
= 339 ± 77 kJ/mole and
D
o = 6.93 × 10
−6 m
2/s and
c-axis,
E
a
= 265 ± 66 kJ/mole and
D
o = 4.34 × 10
−9 m
2/s. In this temperature range, any possible anisotropy of cation diffusion is very small, however the activation energy for
diffusion parallel to the
c-axis (001) is the lowest and the activation energies for diffusion parallel to the
a-axis (100) and
b-axis (010) are higher. Application of these diffusion results to the silicate phases of the Lowicz mesosiderite meteorite
provides cooling rates for the silicate portion of the meteorite (4–11 °C/100 years) that are similar, although slower, to
previous estimates. These silicate cooling rates are still several orders of magnitude faster than the cooling rates (0.1 °C/10
6 years) for the metal portions.
Received: 22 January 1997 / Accepted: 2 October 1997