Royal Society Open Science (Feb 2021)
Carrier and dilution effects of CO2 on thoron emissions from a zeolitized tuff exposed to subvolcanic temperatures
Abstract
Radon (222Rn) and thoron (220Rn) are two isotopes belonging to the noble gas radon (sensu lato) that is frequently employed for the geochemical surveillance of active volcanoes. Temperature gradients operating at subvolcanic conditions may induce chemical and structural modifications in rock-forming minerals and their related 222Rn–220Rn emissions. Additionally, CO2 fluxes may also contribute enormously to the transport of radionuclides through the microcracks and pores of subvolcanic rocks. In view of these articulated phenomena, we have experimentally quantified the changes of 220Rn signal caused by dehydration of a zeolitized tuff exposed to variable CO2 fluxes. Results indicate that, at low CO2 fluxes, water molecules and hydroxyl groups adsorbed on the glassy surface of macro- and micropores are physically removed by an intermolecular proton transfer mechanism, leading to an increase of the 220Rn signal. By contrast, at high CO2 fluxes, 220Rn emissions dramatically decrease because of the strong dilution capacity of CO2 that overprints the advective effect of carrier fluids. We conclude that the sign and magnitude of radon (sensu lato) changes observed in volcanic settings depend on the flux rate of carrier fluids and the rival effects between advective transport and radionuclide dilution.
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