Mantle Convection and Surface Expressions. Группа авторов
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Mantle Convection and Surface Expressions - Группа авторов страница 27

Название: Mantle Convection and Surface Expressions

Автор: Группа авторов

Издательство: John Wiley & Sons Limited

Жанр: Физика

Серия:

isbn: 9781119528593

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ studies of lower mantle phases are complicated by the fact that many phases are unstable (Brg) or unquenchable (Ca‐Pv and pPv) to ambient conditions. Both Ca‐Pv and pPv become amorphous during pressure release and cannot be preserved to ambient pressures. Thus study of recovered samples (from high pressure and/or temperature experiments) is difficult or impossible, necessitating in‐situ analysis. A technique that has led to significant advances in deformation studies of these phases is the use of synchrotron x‐ray diffraction in conjunction with high pressure and temperature deformation devices.

      2.3.1 The Diamond Anvil Cell as a Deformation Device

      The DAC may also be used in radial geometry to study deformation properties at high pressures. In radial diffraction, the x‐ray beam is directed through the gasket, orthogonal to the compression direction. For these experiments, no pressure medium is used so that the diamonds impose pressure and deviatoric stress to deform the material elastically and plastically. This geometry requires x‐ray transparent gaskets such as beryllium or amorphous boron (Hemley et al., 1997; Merkel & Yagi, 2005) to allow passage of the x‐ray beam across the sample. Radial diffraction technique and the DAC has now been used for around two decades to make in‐situ measurement of lattice strains and texture development at high pressure (Hemley et al., 1997; Wenk et al., 2000).

Graph depicts the approximate pressure and temperature capabilities of various deformation devices including both large volume techniques and the radial diffraction diamond anvil cell (R-DAC). Also plotted for reference is a “cold” mantle geotherm.

      In compression, experiments, diamonds induce both pressure and deviatoric stress on the sample, and these cannot be easily decoupled. Thus, studying deformation properties at a fixed confining pressure in the DAC is currently not possible. This means that flow stresses estimated from DAC experiments convolute strengthening due to pressure and strain hardening. Controlling strain rates is difficult in the DAC. Often, deformation is controlled through manual increase of pressure/stress through turning load screws. Not only does this result in a discontinuous increase in stress and strain, but it is incompatible with simultaneous heating and deformation. Furthermore, the small sample size makes it difficult to measure sample dimensions during experiments, and commonly strain (and thus strain rate) cannot be measured. The use of a gas membrane has somewhat improved on this, as compression is smoother than with screws. The DAC can also be used with a piezoelectric actuator, which can provide a more controlled compression than a membrane‐driven DAC (Evans et al., 2007; Jenei et al., 2019). The dynamic DAC has recently been combined with high‐resolution radiography to successfully measure small strains in an iron sample at high pressure (Hunt et al., 2018). Estimated total strains for compression in the DAC are ~0.3 (30%) and strain rates (albeit discontinuous) are on the order of 10−4s−1 (Marquardt & Miyagi, 2015). Recently, rotational DACs have been developed that allow large shear strains to be imposed at pressures in excess of 100 GPa (Azuma et al., 2018; Nomura et al., 2017).

      Small sample sizes in the DAC further limit its capabilities as a deformation device. Sample sizes are quite small in the DAC, generally 0.03–0.05 mm thick at the start of an experiment and on the order of a few hundredths of a millimeter to a few tenths of a millimeter in diameter. This yields corresponding sample volumes of ~10−2 mm3 to 10−5 mm3, but volumes become significantly reduced at high pressures. As a sufficient number of grains must be sampled to obtain statistically representative information, the upper limit of grain sizes feasible in the DAC is quite low. This makes studying the effect of changing grain size on rheology problematic in the DAC. One techniques that has been recently developed that somewhat alleviates СКАЧАТЬ