some remarks on micro-physics of lpo (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials

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12/14/2009 MR-14A-06 1 Some remarks on micro- physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials Shun-ichiro Karato Yale University Department of Geology & Geophysics

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Some remarks on micro-physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials. Shun-ichiro Karato Yale University Department of Geology & Geophysics. Why LPO?. upper mantle. D ” layer. transition zone. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Some remarks on micro-physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials

12/14/2009 MR-14A-061

Some remarks on micro-physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy)

some tutorials

Shun-ichiro KaratoYale University

Department of Geology & Geophysics

Page 2: Some remarks on micro-physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials

12/14/2009 MR-14A-062

Visser et al. (2008) Trampert and van Heijst (2002) Panning and Romanowicz (2006)

upper mantle

transition zone

D” layer

Why LPO?

Page 3: Some remarks on micro-physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials

12/14/2009 MR-14A-063

• Seismic anisotropy is controlled mostly by LPO.• But the relationships between LPO and flow geometry are

poorly known for most part of Earth’s interior.

• LPO is determined by the dominant slip systems (LPO) that are controlled by a combination of many microscopic processes (physics of LPO is complex!).

experimental approach: (i) systematic, well-defined lab experiments + (ii) scaling analysis

theoretical approach: (i) key parameters (diffusion, dislocation properties) + (ii) integration of multi-scale physics of deformation

Page 4: Some remarks on micro-physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials

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olivine wadsleyite

[100] [010] [001]

~1800 K

~1700 K

~1500 K

(preliminary results)

Page 5: Some remarks on micro-physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials

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LPO-flow geometry relationship depends on (i) materials, and (ii) physical/chemical conditions (fabric transitions).

Page 6: Some remarks on micro-physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials

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Origin of plastic anisotropy (dislocation creep)How do fabric transitions occur? What controls LPO?

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Page 8: Some remarks on micro-physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials

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Houlier et al. (1981) from Costa and Chakraborty (2008)

“dry”

Si diffusion in olivine is nearly isotropic.--> diffusion controlled model does not explain large

plastic anisotropy

Page 9: Some remarks on micro-physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials

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Fabric transitions for olivine

A

B

C

D

E

Page 10: Some remarks on micro-physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials

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Observations for olivine

• Dominant slip direction is b=[100] (or [001])• consistent with the role of kink/jog

• Stress-induced fabric transitions• inconsistent with the simple diffusion-controlled model

• Larger water weakening effect for b=[001]• cannot be explained by the simple diffusion-controlled model• larger weakening effects for dislocations with larger Peierls stress

(or longer Burgers vector)

anisotropy is largely due to dislocation-related properties

(not by diffusion)

Page 11: Some remarks on micro-physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials

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A model of fabric transitions

• Stress/temperature-induced fabric transition (low T, high stress) [kink energy (Peierls stress)]

• Water/temperature-induced fabric transition (high T, low stress, high water fugacity) [diffusion (point defects), jog energy]

Page 12: Some remarks on micro-physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials

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Page 13: Some remarks on micro-physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials

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Testing the jog (+ diffusion) - controlled modelsome speculations on post-perovskite phase

Eshelby-Foreman theory for dislocation energy with anisotropic elasticity

Jog-controlled climb model is consistentwith olivine data. [100](010) or [100](001)

for post-perovskite?

diffusion creep? • large dislocation energy• fast diffusion (Karki-Khanduja (2007))

Page 14: Some remarks on micro-physics of LPO (plastic anisotropy) some tutorials

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Conclusions

Plastic anisotropy is caused mostly by anisotropic dislocation properties (not much by diffusion anisotropy). Plastic anisotropy depends on T, stress, water content etc. lab studies: well-defined experiments (high-T, low stress) + scaling analysis [Direct applications of lab results without scaling analyses can lead to misleading conclusions.]

modeling: test with well-known materials (e.g., olivine) and then apply to not-yet-studied minerals [jog-controlled model (high-T plasticity model) works OK for olivine, and suggests [100](010) or [100](001) (or [001](100))is the easiest slip system in post-perovskite. But deformation in ppv might occur by diffusion creep.]

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Plastic anisotropy of post-perovskite ?

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Micro-physics of LPO(reminder of ABC of LPO)

• LPO depends on macroscopic deformation geometry and microscopic deformation mechanisms.

• Deformation by dislocation creep produces LPO.• LPO formed by dislocation creep depends activity of slip

systems.• LPO is largely controlled by easiest (+ some other) slip

system(s).• The relative easiness of slip systems is controlled by the

relative rate of deformation that is controlled by (i) anisotropy of dislocation energy (kink, jog formation energy), (ii) by anisotropy of diffusion.– These factors will change with T, P, stress, water content etc.– Results at conditions different from Earth’s interior (e.g., low T)

cannot be applied to Earth’s interior.

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How should we investigate LPO relevant to Earth’s interior?

(micro-physics of LPO is complex)

• Experimental approach: time scales are vastly different between lab and Earth (need extrapolation)

• what kind of experiments should we conduct ?• How should we extrapolate these results ?

• Theoretical (modeling) approach: creep processes are complex

• How should we infer the dominant slip system(s)?• Diffusion coefficients ?• Dislocation properties ?• How should we integrate ?

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Strong LPO develops by deformation only through certain mechanisms

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• Classic diffusion-controlled high-T creep model: can it explain fabric transitions?

• Peierls stress: How does it explain plastic anisotropy at high-T?