Water Uptake and Release of Nitrate Salt Mixtures of Relevance to the Atacama Desert and Mars

authored by
M. S. Fernanders, R. V. Gough, V. F. Chevrier, D. Boy, J. Boy, C. E. Carr, M. A. Tolbert
Abstract

Understanding the behavior of water in extreme environments is crucial in assessing its habitability potential. This study investigates the water uptake and release of nitrate and nitrate salt mixtures under Martian and Atacama Desert-like conditions. The Atacama serves as a Mars analogue due to its hyper-arid climate and shared salt composition. This study determines deliquescence and efflorescence relative humidities (DRH and ERH, respectively) for pure magnesium nitrate hexahydrate (Mg(NO3)2·6H2O) as a function of temperature and perchlorate/nitrate mixtures at various ratios at 248 K. Finally, the effects of magnesium sulfate anhydrous (MgSO4) on Mg(NO3)2·6H2O are also investigated. Pure Mg(NO3)2 DRH varied with temperature (80% RH at 223 K to 63% at 268 K), while ERH remained constant at 24% RH across temperatures. When mixed with perchlorate, the DRH values were lowered, reaching values close to 40% RH. The less deliquescent MgSO4 had minimal impact on Mg(NO3)2 water uptake when mixed in equimolar ratios. The laboratory DRH conditions did not align with conditions found on Mars, indicating that the salt mixtures are unlikely to deliquesce under Martian conditions found at Gale Crater. However, the warmer temperatures of the Atacama may favor water uptake. Therefore, the DRH and ERH data were applied to two sites in the Atacama. Conditions in the Atacama support water uptake by nitrates in the fall/winter seasons, allowing for the possibility of metastable brines persisting for extended periods. Thus, although nitrates may enhance habitability in the Atacama, they may play less of a role in habitability on Mars.

Organisation(s)
Institute of Microbiology
Institute of Earth System Sciences
External Organisation(s)
University of Colorado Boulder
University of Arkansas
Georgia Institute of Technology
Type
Article
Journal
ACS Earth and Space Chemistry
Volume
8
Pages
1700-1712
No. of pages
13
Publication date
19.09.2024
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Geochemistry and Petrology, Atmospheric Science, Space and Planetary Science
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG 13 - Climate Action
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsearthspacechem.3c00371 (Access: Closed)