http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2003/12/10_heat.shtml

Radioactive potassium may be major heat source in Earth's core 

By Robert Sanders, Media Relations 
UC Berkeley News
10 December 2003

BERKELEY - Radioactive potassium, common enough on Earth to make potassium-rich 
bananas one of the "hottest" foods around, appears also to be a substantial 
source of heat in the Earth's core, according to recent experiments by 
University of California, Berkeley, geophysicists. 

Radioactive potassium, uranium and thorium are thought to be the three main 
sources of heat in the Earth's interior, aside from that generated by the 
formation of the planet. Together, the heat keeps the mantle actively 
churning and the core generating a protective magnetic field. 

But geophysicists have found much less potassium in the Earth's crust and 
mantle than would be expected based on the composition of rocky meteors that 
supposedly formed the Earth. If, as some have proposed, the missing 
potassium resides in the Earth's iron core, how did an element as light
as potassium get there, especially since iron and potassium don't mix?

Kanani Lee, who recently earned her Ph.D. from UC Berkeley, and UC Berkeley 
professor of earth and planetary science Raymond Jeanloz have discovered a 
possible answer. They've shown that at the high pressures and temperatures 
in the Earth's interior, potassium can form an alloy with iron never before 
observed. During the planet's formation, this potassium-iron alloy could 
have sunk to the core, depleting potassium in the overlying mantle and crust 
and providing a radioactive potassium heat source in addition to that 
supplied by uranium and thorium in the core. 

Lee created the new alloy by squeezing iron and potassium between the tips 
of two diamonds to temperatures and pressures characteristic of 600-700 
kilometers below the surface - 2,500 degrees Celsius and nearly 4 million 
pounds per square inch, or a quarter of a million times atmospheric
pressure. 

"Our new findings indicate that the core may contain as much as 1,200 parts 
per million potassium -just over one tenth of one percent," Lee said. "This 
amount may seem small, and is comparable to the concentration of 
radioactive potassium naturally present in bananas. Combined over the 
entire mass of the Earth's core, however, it can be enough to provide 
one-fifth of the heat given off by the Earth." 

Lee and Jeanloz will report their findings on Dec. 10, at the American 
Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco, and in an article accepted 
for publication in Geophysical Research Letters. 

"With one experiment, Lee and Jeanloz demonstrated that potassium may be 
an important heat source for the geodynamo, provided a way out of some 
troublesome aspects of the core's thermal evolution, and further 
demonstrated that modern computational mineral physics not only
complements experimental work, but that it can provide guidance to 
fruitful experimental explorations," said Mark Bukowinski, professor of 
earth and planetary science at UC Berkeley, who predicted the unusual 
alloy in the mid-1970s.

Geophysicist Bruce Buffett of the University of Chicago cautions that 
more experiments need to be done to show that iron can actually pull 
potassium away from the silicate rocks that dominate in the
Earth's mantle. 

"They proved it would be possible to dissolve potassium into liquid iron," 
Buffet said. "Modelers need heat, so this is one source, because the 
radiogenic isotope of potassium can produce heat and that can help power 
convection in the core and drive the magnetic field. They proved it 
could go in.  What's important is how much is pulled out of the silicate. 
There's still work to be done " 

If a significant amount of potassium does reside in the Earth's core, this 
would clear up a lingering question - why the ratio of potassium to uranium 
in stony meteorites (chondrites), which presumably coalesced to form the 
Earth, is eight times greater than the observed ratio in the Earth's
crust. Though some geologists have asserted that the missing potassium 
resides in the core, there was no mechanism by which it could have reached 
the core. Other elements like oxygen and carbon form compounds or alloys 
with iron and presumably were dragged down by iron as it sank to the
core. But at normal temperature and pressure, potassium does not associate 
with iron. 

Others have argued that the missing potassium boiled away during the early, 
molten stage of Earth's evolution. 

The demonstration by Lee and Jeanloz that potassium can dissolve in iron to 
form an alloy provides an explanation for the missing potassium. 

"Early in Earth's history, the interior temperature and pressure would not 
have been high enough to make this alloy," Lee said. "But as more and more 
meteorites piled on, the pressure and temperature would have increased to 
the point where this alloy could form." 

The existence of this high-pressure alloy was predicted by Bukowinski in the 
mid-1970s. Using quantum mechanical arguments, he suggested that high 
pressure would squeeze potassium's lone outer electron into a lower shell, 
making the atom resemble iron and thus more likely to alloy with
iron. 

More recent quantum mechanical calculations using improved techniques, 
conducted with Gerd Steinle-Neumann at the Universit�t 
Bayreuth's Bayerisches Geoinstit�t, confirmed the new experimental 
measurements. 

"This really replicates and verifies the earlier calculations 26 years ago 
and provides a physical explanation for our experimental results," Jeanloz 
said. 

The Earth is thought to have formed from the collision of many rocky 
asteroids, perhaps hundreds of kilometers in diameter, in the early solar 
system. As the proto-Earth gradually bulked up, continuing asteroid 
collisions and gravitational collapse kept the planet molten. Heavier 
elements - in particular iron - would have sunk to the core in 10 to 100 
million years' time, carrying with it other elements that bind to iron. 

Gradually, however, the Earth would have cooled off and become a dead rocky 
globe with a cold iron ball at the core if not for the continued release of 
heat by the decay of radioactive elements like potassium-40, uranium-238 and 
thorium-232, which have half-lives of 1.25 billion, 4 billion and 14
billion years, respectively. About one in every thousand potassium atoms 
is radioactive.

The heat generated in the core turns the iron into a convecting dynamo that 
maintains a magnetic field strong enough to shield the planet from the solar 
wind. This heat leaks out into the mantle, causing convection in the rock 
that moves crustal plates and fuels volcanoes. 

Balancing the heat generated in the core with the known concentrations of 
radiogenic isotopes has been difficult, however, and the missing potassium 
has been a big part of the problem. One researcher proposed earlier this 
year that sulfur could help potassium associate with iron and provide a 
means by which potassium could reach the core. 

The experiment by Lee and Jeanloz shows that sulfur is not necessary. Lee 
combined pure iron and pure potassium in a diamond anvil cell and squeezed 
the small sample to 26 gigapascals of pressure while heating the sample 
with a laser above 2,500 Kelvin (4,000 degrees Fahrenheit), which is
above the melting points of both potassium and iron. She conducted this 
experiment six times in the high-intensity X-ray beams of two different 
accelerators - Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory's Advanced Light Source 
and the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratory - to obtain
X-ray diffraction images of the samples' internal structure. The images 
confirmed that potassium and iron had mixed evenly to form an alloy, much 
as iron and carbon mix to form steel alloy. 

In the theoretical magma ocean of a proto-Earth, the pressure at a depth 
of 400-1,000 kilometers (270-670 miles) would be between 15 and 35 
gigapascals and the temperature would be 2,200-3,000 Kelvin, Jeanloz said. 

"At these temperatures and pressures, the underlying physics changes and 
the electron density shifts, making potassium look more like iron," Jeanloz 
said. "At high pressure, the periodic table looks totally different." 

"The work by Lee and Jeanloz provides the first proof that potassium is 
indeed miscible in iron at high pressures and, perhaps as significantly, 
it further vindicates the computational physics that underlies the original 
prediction," Bukowinski said. "If it can be further demonstrated that 
potassium would enter iron in significant amounts in the presence of 
silicate minerals, conditions representative of likely core formation 
processes, then potassium could provide the extra heat needed to explain
why the Earth's inner core hasn't frozen to as large a size as the thermal 
history of the core suggests it should."

Jeanloz is excited by the fact that theoretical calculations are now not 
only explaining experimental findings at high pressure, but also predicting 
structures. 

"We need theorists to identify interesting problems, not only check our 
results after the experiment," he said. "That's happening now. In the past 
half a dozen years, theorists have been making predictions that 
experimentalists are willing to spend a few years to demonstrate." 

The work was funded by the National Science Foundation and the Department of 
Energy. 

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