4:30 PM - 4:45 PM
[SCG58-17] Fabric transition in olivine due to temperature and stress at high pressures
Keywords:low-temperature plasticity, slip system, olivine
Samples were polycrystalline aggregates of San Carlos olivine with a grain size of 5-10 μm. Deformation experiments were carried out using the D-DIA apparatus at X-ray beamline X17B2 in the National Synchrotron Light Source (NSLS), Brookhaven National Laboratory. Samples were deformed to strains of 20-30% at a constant displacement rate of 0.1-6.8 x 10-5 /s, temperatures of 673-1573 K, pressures of 4-9 GPa, and differential stresses of 0.6-3.8 GPa. Creep data at the highest temperature (T = 1573 K) and lowest stress indicated a dislocation, power-law creep mechanism, while creep results at lower temperatures (T < 1273 K) and higher stresses revealed an exponential flow mechanism (Mei et al., 2010).
After deformation experiments, we determined the crystallographic fabric (CPO, crystallographic preferred orientation) in the deformed samples using electron backscattered diffraction (EBSD). At the highest temperature (T = 1573K) and lower stresses (σ < 1 GPa), the poles of the (010) planes concentrated parallel to the maximum principal stress. This concentration of (010) planes is more dispersed at a temperature of 1473 K. In contrast, at lower temperatures (T < 1373 K) and higher stresses (σ > 2 GPa), the poles of the (100) planes concentrated parallel to the maximum principal stress. The change of crystallographic fabric in deformed samples is roughly consistent with the change of deformation mechanisms based on the analyses of mechanical data as stated above. This transition in slip plane associated with a change in temperature and stress is consistent with a difference in dominant slip systems of (010)[100] at higher temperatures and low stresses and (100)[001] at lower temperatures (Bai et al., 1991; Durham and Goetze, 1977; Tielke, 2016), indicating that the dominant slip system in the glide-controlled low-temperature plasticity regime differs from that in the high-temperature climb-controlled creep regime.