High-strain creep of feldspar rocks: Implications for cavitation and ductile failure in the lower crust

Physics

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Physical Properties Of Rocks: Plasticity, Diffusion, And Creep, Mineral Physics: Creep And Deformation, Structural Geology: High Strain Deformation Zones, Structural Geology: Rheology: Crust And Lithosphere (8159)

Scientific paper

Cavitation damage and ductile fracturing is a common phenomenon observed in high-temperature, ambient pressure deformation of superplastic metals and ceramics, but hardly described for geological materials. We performed high-pressure, high-temperature (400 MPa, 950°C-1200°C) torsion experiments on fine-grained (size ~4 μm, aspect ratio ~2.5) synthetic feldspar aggregates containing <3 vol% residual glass. Samples deformed at constant strain rates (~2 × 10-5 - 2 × 10-4 s-1) to high strain (~2.8-5.6) reveal strain hardening at the lower strain rates. Microstructures show pronounced cavitation and formation of porosity bands containing redistributed glass, presumably associated with grain boundary sliding and shape-preferred orientation of high-aspect ratio feldspar grains. Sudden failure by strain-induced nucleation, growth and coalescence of the cavities occurred in one-third of the samples before deformation was terminated. In natural mylonites cavitation damage may produce increased porosity enhancing fluid flow in high-temperature shear zones.

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