Plasticity and diffusion creep of dolomite
Natural and synthetic dolomites have been shortened in triaxial compression experiments at temperatures of 400–850 °C, equilibrium CO 2 pore pressures, effective confining pressures of 50–400 MPa, and strain rates of 10 − 4 to 10 − 7 s − 1 . At low temperatures ( T < 700 °C) natural and syntheti...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Tectonophysics 2008-08, Vol.456 (3), p.127-146 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Natural and synthetic dolomites have been shortened in triaxial compression experiments at temperatures of 400–850 °C, equilibrium CO
2 pore pressures, effective confining pressures of 50–400 MPa, and strain rates of 10
−
4
to 10
−
7
s
−
1
. At low temperatures (
T
<
700 °C) natural and synthetic dolomites exhibit high crystal-plastic strengths (>
600 MPa), both for coarse-grained (240 μm) and fine-grained (2 μm and 12 μm) samples; differential stresses vary little with strain rate or temperature and microstructures of coarse-grained samples are dominated by
f-twins and undulatory extinction. An exponential relation (
ɛ˙
=
ɛ˙
o exp[
α(
σ
1
−
σ
3)] between strain rate
ɛ˙ and differential stress (
σ
1
−
σ
3) describes the crystal plasticity of dolomite at a fixed
P
e and
T, with
α
=
0.079 (±
0.01) MPa
−
1
and 0.023 (±
07.03) MPa
−
1
for coarse- and fine-grained materials, respectively. However, measured values of (
σ
1
−
σ
3) increase with increasing temperature, a trend that has been observed for dolomite single crystals but cannot be described by an Arrhenius relation.
At high temperatures (
T
≥
800 °C for coarse,
T
≥
700 °C for fine), dolomite strengths are reduced with increasing temperature and decreasing strain rate, but the mechanisms of deformation differ depending on grain size. High temperature flow strengths of coarse-grained dolomite can be described by a power law
ɛ˙
=
ɛ˙
o[(
σ
1
−
σ
3)
/
μ]
n
exp(−
H
⁎
/
RT) with a large value of
n (>
5) and a ratio of parameters
H
⁎
/
n
=
60 (±
6) kJ/mol. Microstructures of coarse-grained samples deformed at
T
≥
800 °C show evidence of dislocation creep with little mechanical twinning. High temperature flow strengths of fine-grained synthetic dolomite fit a thermally activated Newtonian law, where the effective
n
=
1.28 (±
0.15) and
H
⁎
=
280 (±
45 kJ/mol), consistent with diffusion creep.
The change in mechanical response of coarse-grained natural dolomite with increasing temperature represents a transition from twinning and slip with little or no recovery to dislocation creep, while the change in response of fine-grained synthetic dolomite represents a transition from crystal plasticity to diffusion creep. The combined results for coarse- and fine-grained dolomites define a deformation mechanism map with fields of crystal plasticity, dislocation creep, and diffusion creep. Strengths of coarse-grained dolomite in the crystal plastic and dislocation creep fields are much larger than strengths of calcite rocks |
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ISSN: | 0040-1951 1879-3266 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.tecto.2008.02.002 |