russ_watters said:
The first semi-scientific experiment I remember performing was in Junior High and called The Distillation of Wood:
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&sou...Vaw3hgqF22Z2HAE7v_p6vUW8w&cshid=1557346224922
Heating wood drives off water and various hydrocarbons, leaving charcoal. Similar idea.
Hi russ_waters !
Thanks for your note on wood. I think it is super relevant to the question on this thread.
I guess I will just add this: A portion of matter can be decomposed into different compounds (chemical/mineralogical subsets or subproducts) via ''navigating the P-T space''. In the case of wood on a bonfire, or distillation of wood; the wood looses water/volatiles by, at constant pressure, rising its temperature; and you are finally left with charcoal (and the volatiles in the surrounding air). But, in a different way, moving in the P-T space increasing both the temperature and the pressure, one could get similar results..
In subduction zones, oceanic lithosphere minerals/rocks (basalt/gabro) are subjected to higher P and T, and they undergo phase changes were volatiles are expelled (dehydration of the original mineral) to the surrounding mantle, and the solid residue is another mineral/rock (such as eclogite).
In the case of organics/plants being buried under sediments and subjected to tectonism, the ''plants'' are subjected to higher P and T, with some specific path for each case. The specific path and final conditions are what (I think) determine the generation of gas, oil or coal.
I am no expert on petrology, whatsoever. But, I would like to ask the following:
is the generation of these phases (gas, oil, coal) only state(P-T) dependent?, or is it more complex, being state- and path-dependent?
cheers,
Felipe