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DGGV-E-Publikationen

Title: Dislocation creep flow laws of wet quartzite: the significance of pressure and slip systems

Authors:
Lucy Lu (1) & Dazhi Jiang

Institutions:
Western University, Canada (1); State Key Laboratory of Continental Dynamics, Department of Geology, Northwest University, Xi’an, China (2)

Event: Abstract GeoUtrecht2020

Date: 2020

DOI: 10.48380/dggv-k4rp-2202

Summary:
An accurate flow law for dislocation creep of quartzite is critical for the understanding of continental rheology and geodynamic models.

Despite many years of effort, existing creep experiments have yielded very different quartz flow law parameters.

We demonstrate that the difference can be explained by considering the pressure effect on the activation enthalpy and the slip system dependence of the stress exponent.

We carefully examine high-quality experimental data of wet quartzite corresponding to steady-state regimes 2, and 3 dislocation creep together

with related quartz c-axis fabrics and identify two end-member quartz flow laws corresponding to dominant prism slip and dominant basal slip respectively.

The parameters of two flow laws are determined from experiments through a self-consistent iterative approach. The flow law for dislocation creep by dominant prism

slip is ε=2.5×10^-14·f^2.6·exp(-(132000+35.8P)/RT)·σ^4 and that by dominant basal slip is ε=6.3×10^-12·f^1.7·exp(-(126000+23.1P)/RT)·σ^2.5.

Quartz c-axis from both experiments and nature, suggest that there is a continuous spectrum from dominant prism slip to a mixture of prism and basal slip to dominant basal slip.

 

In such a case, quartzite is a polycrystal aggregate in which the slip system varies among grains. On a suitable representative volume element, the overall rheology of a quartzite must be obtained through a self-consistent micromechanics approach. The results are shown as a plot of overall strength versus temperature and contributions of dominant slip systems in a 3D profile. We also discussed the significance and implications of multiple flow behaviors for continental strength.

: World



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