Yttrium speciation in sulfate-rich hydrothermal ore-forming fluids

Created 19/11/2025

Updated 19/11/2025

Rare Earth elements (REE) are gaining importance due to their increasing industrial applications and usefulness as petrogenetic indicators. REE-sulfate complexes are some of the most stable REE aqueous species in hydrothermal fluids, and may be responsible for REE transport and deposition in a wide variety of geological environments, ranging from sedimentary basins to magmatic hydrothermal settings. However, the thermodynamic properties of most REE-sulfate complexes are derived from extrapolation of ambient temperature data, since direct information on REE-sulfate complexing under hydrothermal conditions is only available for Nd, Sm and Er to 250 ˚C (Migdisov and William-Jones, 2008, 2016). We employed ab initio molecular dynamics (MD) simulations to calculate the speciation and thermodynamic properties of yttrium(III) in sulfate and sulfate-chloride solutions at temperatures and pressures up to 500 ºC and 800 bar. The MD results were complemented by in situ X-ray absorption spectroscopy (XAS) measurements. Both MD and XAS show that yttrium(III) sulfate complexes form and become increasingly stable with temperature (≥200 ˚C). The MD results also suggest that mixed yttrium-sulfate-chloride complexes (that cannot be distinguished from mixtures of chloride and sulfate complexes experimentally) form at ≥350 ˚C. Two structures with two different Y(III)-S distances (monodentate and bidentate) are observed for Y(III)-sulfate bonding. The formation constants (derived via thermodynamic integration) for the Y(III) mono- and di-sulfate complexes parallel the trends for the those of Nd, Sm and Er determined experimentally to 250 ˚C. The derived formation constants were used to fit the revised Helgeson-Kirkham-Flowers equation-of-state parameters that enabled calculation of formation constants for Y(SO4)+ and Y(SO4)2- over a wide range of temperatures and pressures. The presence of sulfate increases the solubility of Y(III) under specific conditions. Since the stability of sulfate is redox sensitive, Y(III) solubility becomes highly redox-sensitive, with rapid precipitation of Y minerals upon destabilisation of aqueous sulfate. Citation: Qiushi Guan, Yuan Mei, Barbara Etschmann, Marion Louvel, Denis Testemale, Evgeniy Bastrakov, Joël Brugger, Yttrium speciation in sulfate-rich hydrothermal ore-forming fluids, Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, Volume 325, 2022, Pages 278-295, ISSN 0016-7037, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2022.03.011.

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Title Yttrium speciation in sulfate-rich hydrothermal ore-forming fluids
Language eng
Licence Not Specified
Landing Page https://data.gov.au/data/en/dataset/3f8c9168-83d8-403d-9c08-c1f3d61d69b9
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Geoscience Australia Data
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Geospatial Coverage
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This dataset was originally found on Geoscience Australia "Yttrium speciation in sulfate-rich hydrothermal ore-forming fluids". Please visit the source to access the original metadata of the dataset:
https://ecat.ga.gov.au/geonetwork/srv/eng/csw/dataset/yttrium-speciation-in-sulfate-rich-hydrothermal-ore-forming-fluids1