The high-speed entry of cosmic dust particles into a planetary atmosphere can have a range of impacts both in the atmosphere and at the surface. These have been reviewed both for the Earth (Plane, 2012) and other solar system bodies (Plane et al., 2017). Good progress has been made in the past decade developing chemical models of meteoric ablation, which are able to predict the ablation rates of individual elements from a cosmic dust particle of specified mass, velocity and entry angle (Vondrak et al., 2008). In the case of the Leeds Chemical Ablation Model (CABMOD), these elements include a range of metals (Fe, Mg, Si, Na, Ni etc.) (Bones et al., 2019; Carrillo-Sánchez, Gómez-Martín, et al., 2020) and P (Carrillo-Sánchez et al., 2020a). This model has been tested in the laboratory using a Meteoric Ablation Simulator (MASI-1) which enables the ablation of two elements to be observed in real time from meteoritic particles that are flash heated with a temperature profile simulating atmospheric entry (Bones et al., 2016;Gómez-Martín et al., 2017).However, the pyrolysis of carbon and sulfur compounds in cosmic dust at temperatures below 1800 K (i.e., prior to melting), which can potentially lead to meteoric fragmentation if sufficiently rapid (Campbell-Brown, 2019),