grain boundary structure in minerals and analogues during ......ii 3 microstructural evolution and...
TRANSCRIPT
Submitted Version of PhD Thesis
Grain boundary structure in minerals and
analogues during recrystallization in the
presence of a fluid phase
Submitted version of PhD Thesis
“Grain boundary structure in minerals and analogues during recrystallization
in the presence of a fluid phase”
Der Fakultät für Georessourcen und Materialtechnik
der Rheinisch-Westfälischen Technischen Hochschule Aachen
vorgelegte Dissertation zur Erlangung
des akademischen Grades eines Doktors der Naturwissenschaften
von
Dipl. Geol. Oliver Schenk
aus Aachen
i
Table of contents
Zusammenfassung 1
Abstract 3
1 Introduction 5
1.1 General 5
1.2 Brief review of recrystallization processes 5
1.3 The grain-scale distribution of fluids 11
1.4 Aim of this study 24
1.5 Overview of this thesis 25
1.6 Parts of the thesis which have been published 26
1.7 References 27
2 The effect of water on recrystallization behavior and grain
boundary morphology in calcite – observations of natural
marble mylonites 32
2.1 Introduction 32
2.2 Geological setting and sampling 36
2.3 Observations 41
2.4 Discussion 53
2.5 Conclusions 57
2.6 References 58
ii
3 Microstructural evolution and grain boundary structure
during static recrystallization in synthetic polycrystals of
Sodium Chloride containing saturated brine 63
3.1 Introduction 64
3.2 Aims of this study 67
3.3 Methods 67
3.4 Results 71
3.5 Discussion 83
3.6 References 88
3.7 Appendix 91
4 Structure of grain boundaries in wet, synthetic
polycrystalline, statically recrystallizing halite – evidence
from cryo-SEM observations 96
4.1 Introduction 97
4.2 Methods 100
4.3 Observations 102
4.4 Discussion 116
4.5 Conclusions 119
4.6 References 119
5 The migration of fluid-filled grain boundaries in
recrystallizing synthetic bischofite – observations from in-
situ deformation experiments in transmitted light 123
5.1 Introduction 124
5.2 Experimental techniques 125
5.3 Observations 127
iii
5.4 Discussion 139
5.5 Conclusions 145
5.6 Appendix 146
5.7 References 148
1
Zusammenfassung:
Thema der vorliegenden Arbeit ist die Struktur und Morphologie von Korngrenzen
während der Rekristallisation in Gegenwart von Fluiden. Die fluidunterstützte
Korngrenzenbewegung wird untersucht anhand einer Kombination aus in-situ-
Experimenten unter dem Durchlichtmikroskop und mikrostrukturellen Studien an
natürlichen Proben und Analogmaterialien.
Die Anwesenheit von Fluiden kann das rheologischen Verhalten von Mineralien und
Gesteinen beträchtlich beeinflussen. Ziel dieser Studie ist es, ein besseres Verständnis
der Eigenschaften von Fluiden in Korngrenzen – wie zum Beispiel Morphologie,
Permeabilität oder ihr Einfluss auf das Rekristallisationsverhalten – zu erlangen.
Es wird angenommen, dass fluidenthaltende Korngrenzen als schnelle intergranulare
Diffusionswege dienen und somit Prozesse des spannungsabhängigen Massentransfers
wie Drucklösung oder Korngrenzenwanderung beschleunigen. Detailliertes Wissen
über die kleinmaßstäbliche Fluidverteilung unter Ungleichgewichtsbedingungen ist
daher erforderlich, um die mechanischen Eigenschaften und Transportcharakeristika
von Gesteinen in Erdkruste und -mantel vorherzusagen.
Um Informationen über den Einfluss von Fluiden auf das Rekristallisationsverhalten
und die Korngrenzstruktur in natürlichem Kalzit zu erlangen, wurden
Marmormylonite vom Schneeberg-Komplex (italienische/österreichische Alpen) mit
denen des metamorphen Kernkomplexes von Naxos (Griechenland) verglichen. Beide
Arbeitsgebiete zeichnen sich durch eine ähnliche geologische Geschichte aus. Jedoch
sind sie verschieden in der Menge und Beschaffenheit der Fluide, die während der
Mylonitisierung anwesend waren. Während die mikrostrukturelle Entwicklung der
Schneeberg-Mylonite erheblich von den anwesenden Fluiden beeinflusst wurde, wie
Kalzitklüfte, dilatante Korngrenze und intragranulare Brüche belegen, wurden keine
dieser Merkmale in den Naxos-Myloniten beobachtet. Dennoch sind sowohl die
fluidreichen (Schneeberg) als auch die fluidarmen (Naxos) Marmormylonite durch
ähnliche Korngrenzstrukturen gekennzeichnet. Dies deutet darauf hin, dass die Fluide
2
keine gravierenden Auswirkungen auf das Rekristallisationsverhalten von Kalzit
gehabt haben.
Dagegen beeinflussen Fluide in beträchtlichem Maße das Rekristallisationsverhalten
von Steinsalz. Dies belegen die experimentellen Untersuchungen an statisch
rekristallisierendem synthetischem polykristallinem Halit, der geringe Mengen an
gesättigter wässriger Lösung enthält. Die kompaktierten feuchten Proben zweier
Korngrößenklassen (<10 µm und 200-355 µm) wurden ohne externe Spannung bei
Raumtemperatur „geglüht“. Beobachtungen an Rasterelektronen- und Auflicht-
mikroskopen zeigen, dass die grobkörnigen Proben primärer Rekristallisation
unterliegen. Dies ist deutlich zu erkennen an den idiomorphen verformungsfreien
Kristallen, die mit Korngrenzgeschwindigkeiten von bis zu 6 nm/s in die umgebenden
deformierten Körner wachsen. Innerhalb der feinkörnigen Proben folgt der primären
Rekristallisation das normale Kornwachstum. Nach wenigen Stunden sind die
Kontakte geheilt und das Kornwachstum beendet. Während dieses Stadiums beginnt
das außerordentliche Kornwachstum (sekundäre Rekristallisation). Das Wachstum
von primär und sekundär rekristallisierten Körnern wird als Folge der Anwesenheit
von Fluiden innerhalb der Korngrenzen interpretiert. Es kann i) entweder aus einer
signifikant anisotropen Korngrenzenenergie, ii) als Folge eines Wachstumstyps,
welcher auf der Bewegung von Stufen an Grenzflächen von Festkörper und Fluid
beruht, resultieren, oder iii) einer Kombination von beiden unterliegen
Die ganze Breite der eingebundenen Prozesse von fluidunterstützter
Korngrenzenbewegung kann direkt und kontinuierlich mit Hilfe von in-situ-
Experimenten im Durchlichtmikroskop beabachtet werden. Bischofit mit geringen
Mengen an gesättigter wässriger Lösung wurde bei Temperaturen zwischen 50 und
90 °C und einem Fluiddruck von etwa 1 MPa deformiert. Die Verformungsraten lagen
zwischen 5 · 10-6 und 1 · 10-4 s-1. Detaillierte Beobachtungen während und nach der
Deformation dokumentieren die Entwicklung und Bewegung von fluidgefüllten
Korngrenzen in rekristallisierndem Bischofit. Die Ergebnisse zeigen, dass während
der Korngrenzenwanderung Fluideinschlüsse übergangen, aufgenommen und/oder
zurückgelassen werden. Sie stehen in direktem Zusammenhang mit den Parametern
Korngrenzengeschwindigkeit, Dicke der fluidgefüllten Korngrenze und Größe und
Gestalt der Fluideinschlüsse. Zusätzlich geben die experimentellen Untersuchungen
einen direkten Hinweis darauf, dass die Korngrenzfluide sich in isolierte Einschlüsse
kontrahieren, nachdem sich Gleichgewichtsbedingungen eingestellt haben.
3
Abstract:
This thesis deals with the structure of grain boundaries during recrystallization in the
presence of fluids. It combines direct observations of fluid-assisted grain boundary
migration from in-situ experiments in transmitted light with microstructural studies on
naturally and experimentally recrystallized samples.
The aim is to get a better insight into the properties of fluids in grain boundaries such
as morphology, connectivity and their influence on recrystallization processes. One of
the major effects on rheology results from the presence of fluids in grain boundaries.
Such fluid-bearing grain boundaries serve as fast intergranular diffusional pathways
that allow processes of stress-driven mass transfer such as solution-precipitation creep
or fluid-assisted grain boundary migration. Detailed knowledge of the micro-scale
non-equilibrium fluid distribution is required to predict the mechanical and transport
properties of rocks deforming under metamorphic conditions.
To derive information on the effect of water-rich fluids on the recrystallization
behavior and grain boundary morphology in natural calcite, marble mylonites from
the Schneeberg complex (Italian/Austrian Alps) and the high grade core of Naxos
metamorphic core complex (Greece) were compared. Both settings have similar
geologic histories, but they are different in the nature of the fluids present during
mylonitization. Both the fluid-rich (Schneeburg) and fluid-poor (Naxos) marble
mylonites have similar grain boundary microstructures. The microstructural evolution
inside the Schneeberg mylonites was affected by the presence of fluids as shown by
the presence of syndeformational calcite veins, dilatant grain boundaries and
intragranular cracks. None of these features are present in the Naxos samples.
However, the fluids did not have a major influence on recrystallization behavior and
grain boundary morphology in calcite, at least for these two marble mylonites. The
fluids were interpreted to be dragged as isolated pores by the grain boundary during
migration.
In contrast the presence of fluids strongly affects the recrystallization behaviour in
halite, as shown by the experiments on statically recrystallizing synthetic
4
polycrystalline halite containing small amounts of brine. The compacted wet samples
of two different grain size classes (<10 µm and 200-355 µm) annealed at room
temperature without an external stress field. Observations from conventional scanning
electron and reflected light microscopy show that the coarse grained samples undergo
primary recrystallization indicated by large, euhedral strain-free grains that grow into
the deformed old grains. The rates of fluid-assisted grain boundary migration are
measured to be up to 6 nm/s. Inside the fine grained samples primary recrystallization
was followed by normal grain growth, but stopped after a few hours due to contact
healing, while exaggerated grain growth (secondary recrystallization) initiated at this
stage. The growth of the primary and secondary recrystallized grains is interpreted to
be due to the presence of fluid films on the grain boundaries as a consequence of
either significant anisotropic grain boundary energy and/or a solid-brine type growth
mechanism with a ledge jump mechanism. Direct evidence of the fluid-filled grain
boundaries were obtained from cryo-SEM observations and thicknesses of less than
30 nm have been measured.
The whole range of processes involved during fluid-assisted grain boundary migration
is continuously and directly observed by carrying out in-situ deformation experiments
in transmitted light microscopy. Bischofite containing small amounts of aqueous fluid
is deformed at temperatures between 50 and 90 °C, with the fluid pressure being
around 1 MPa. The strain rates range from 5 · 10-6 to 1 · 10-4 s-1. Detailed observations
during and after deformation document the development and migration of fluid-filled
grain boundaries in recrystallizing wet bischofite. The results show that during grain
boundary migration fluid inclusions are swept, incorporated and/or left behind by the
mobile grain boundaries. This is interpreted to depend on the grain boundary velocity,
the thickness of the fluid-filled grain boundary and the size and shape of the fluid
inclusions. Additionally the experiments present direct evidence for the contraction of
grain boundary fluids into isolated inclusions after equilibrium conditions are attained.
5
Chapter 1:
Introduction
1.0 General The dynamics of geological processes such as mantle convection, subduction,
mountain building or basin formation are highly influenced by the presence of fluids
(melt or volatile phases) as they affect the mechanical and transport properties of the
rocks inside the Earth’s mantle and crust (e.g. Fyfe et al., 1978). The rate of
deformation is significantly controlled by the rate of fluid flow (e.g. Ferry, 1994).
Deformation in turn has a major effect on the transport properties of rocks and on the
fluid distribution (e.g. de Meer et al., 2002), as e.g. increasing fluid pressures may
cause hydraulic microfractures that could lead to at least transiently high
permeabilities and associated high fluid flux (Vrolijk, 1987; Cox & Etheridge, 1989).
Additionally, high pore fluid pressure can attribute to a reduction of the maximum
strength of the lithosphere (Fig. 1.1).
The effect of fluids on deformation has been demonstrated i) both in field and
laboratory, ii) on all scales ranging from grain to plate boundaries, and iii) from the
inside of the Earth’s mantle up to crustal fault zones, i.e. from ductile via semi-brittle
towards brittle dominated deformation regimes.
Inside the oceanic mantle, the depth distribution of seismic anisotropy is interpreted to
be caused by the incorporation of water into the point defects of this nominally
anhydrous mineral (Karato & Jung, 1998) as deformation experiments in the high-
pressure/high-temperature regime show that the presence of water reduces the
strength of olivine aggregates (e.g. Hirth & Kohlstedt, 1996) and that the viscosity of
olivine is reduced with increasing water content.
This phenomenon is also inferred to be found in subduction zones, where fluids from
the subducting slab migrate upwards into the mantle wedge, decrease the viscosity of
the latter and promote the onset of melting. Whether the fluids migrate by porous
6
flow, channelized flow (through hydrofractures) or diapiric advection is determined
by rheology, permeability of the slab and the distribution of the fluids (Hirth &
Kohlstedt, 2003).
Figure 1.1: Example of a strength envelope for the crust showing brittle/frictional
behavior dominating at upper crustal levels (according to Byerlee’s law) and dislocation creep determining the crustal strength at deeper levels (solid curves). The dashed line represents the hypothesized weakening at the brittle-ductile transition probably related to effects of fluid-assisted deformation mechanisms (from Bos & Spiers, 2002).
Inside the Earth’s lithosphere, deformation is predominantly localized in ductile shear
zones or (semi-) brittle faults or fault zones. These are commonly permeable pathways
for crustal fluids. The involvement of fluids in shear zone development and faulting
processes is widely recognized (e.g. Hickman et al., 1995; Alsop & Holdsworth,
2004).
Physical indicators help to identify pathways for fluid flow as increased fluid pressure
reduces the strength of crustal rocks. In addition a variety of chemical effects
influences the rocks’ mechanical properties, i.e. mineral reactions and the transfer of
heat and mass (solutes) that facilitate deformation.
Besides these large-scale pathways for pervasive fluid flow, the micro-scale structure
of rocks or minerals has to be considered. Here the presence of fluids in grain
boundaries has a major impact on the rheology. Fluid-bearing grain boundaries serve
as fast intergranular diffusion path and allow processes of stress-driven mass transfer
as pressure solution (dissolution-precipitation creep) (e.g. Rutter, 1976; Spiers et al.
7
1990) or fluid-assisted grain boundary migration (e.g. Urai et al., 1986a). The
structure of such mobile fluid-filled grain boundaries and their influence on
recrystallization processes are still poorly understood.
1.1 Brief review of recrystallization processes In order to prevent confusion, the (metallurgical) terminology of some processes and
mechanisms that are involved during and after plastic deformation of aggregates is
summarized (Fig. 1.2):
During plastic deformation dislocations and interfaces are generated inside a
crystalline aggregate resulting in a raised stored energy (Humphreys & Hatherly,
1996). As the accumulated dislocations together with curved interfaces or chemical
potential gradients (Fig. 1.2a) are thermodynamically unstable, there is always a
driving force to approach equilibrium conditions by reducing the free energy. Hereby
the processes recrystallization, recovery and grain coarsening are involved.
Recrystallization is, in a general sense, defined as formation and migration of high
angle boundaries driven by the stored energy of deformation, whereas recovery
involves all processes of annihilation and rearrangement of dislocations to lower the
energy (Fig 1.2b) (Doherty et al., 1997).
Under static conditions, i.e. in the absence of concurrent deformation the modification
of the grain structure is termed static recrystallization.
Here, primary recrystallization takes place during annealing of a sufficiently
deformed material (Figs. 1.2c & d): here, very small, new, strain-free grains are
nucleated preferentially at old grain boundaries and grow at the expense of the
surrounding deformed material (Gottstein & Mecking, 1985). Once nuclei exist, this
process is predominantly driven by the difference in dislocation density. Further
annealing results in grain coarsening which lowers the energy configuration of the
grain boundaries. The corresponding driving force is the reduction in grain boundary
area and curved boundaries become straight during migration. During normal grain
growth the average grain size increases (Fig. 1.2e): small grains are consumed while
larger ones grow resulting in maintenance of a narrow distribution of both grain size
and shape (Fig. 1.2f) (Atkinson, 1988; Evans et al., 2001). In some circumstances a
few grains grow selectively to very large grains; a process known as exaggerated
grain growth (Fig. 1.2g). It is characterized by a bimodal grain size distribution with
8
one curve emerging with time compared to the primary distribution (Fig. 1.2h). This
process is also termed abnormal grain growth or secondary recrystallization.
Figure 1.2: Schematic illustration of the main annealing processes (after Humphreys
& Hatherly, 1996). a) deformed state, b) recovered, c) partially recrystallized, d) completely recrystallized, e) normal grain growth, g) abnormal grain growth. f) and h) schematically represent the grain size distribution during normal grain growth and abnormal grain growth, respectively.
9
In contrast, dynamic recrystallization is a process that can lower the free energy of a
crystalline aggregate during deformation. After reaching a critical strain dynamic
recrystallization initiates by nucleation of new primary recrystallizing grains,
preferentially at pre-existing high angle grain boundaries. Again, such strain-free
grains grow into the deformed microstructure driven by the stored energy of
deformation. However due to continuing deformation the dislocation density in the
new grains increases and reduces the driving force for further growth, eventually until
its cessation. The growth can also be limited by the nucleation of further grains at the
migrating grain boundaries, which then grow into both deformed old and deformed
recrystallized grains. With continuous deformation the recrystallized grains attain a
steady state grain size which is strongly dependent on the flow stress, but only minor
to the deformation temperature (Humphreys & Hatherly, 1996).
Upon cessation of deformation the nucleation of new grains is stopped. However
during further annealing the already existing nuclei grow with no incubation period
into the partly or fully recrystallized matrix, a process known as metadynamic
recrystallization.
Subsequently recovery and static recrystallization processes follow. After complete
recrystallization the material may be subject to further grain growth.
In geosciences dynamic (= syntectonic) recrystallization is a common process and two
major types are distinguished: subgrain rotation recrystallization and grain boundary
migration recrystallization.
A fundamental process that occurs during recrystallization and grain growth in
crystalline aggregates is grain boundary migration. In Earth sciences it is of
enormous significance as it influences mechanical and transport properties of rocks,
especially if a fluid-phase is present in grain boundaries.
Although grain boundary migration was subject of extensive investigations over the
last decades in material sciences, the details of the mechanism of migration of high
angle grain boundaries (grain boundaries with misorientations larger than 10 to 15 °)
is still under debate; detailed information on the atomic mechanism of grain boundary
migration is lacking (Gottstein & Shvindlerman, 1999). In the following some
metallurgical grain boundary migration models are briefly summarized.
The general concept of grain boundary migration is based upon the theory of reaction
rates (Haessner & Hofmann, 1978): as a result of thermal activation, atoms are
detached from the grains, move into the grain boundary lying in between and then re-
10
attach to one of the grains again. In the presence of a driving force, i.e. if a free energy
difference exists between two lattice regions, the grain boundary migrates
unidirectional. Detailed models focus on the material transport and one distinguish
between single-process and group-process theories. In the early single-process theory
(Turnbull, 1951) the boundary migration is controlled by single movements of atoms:
after being detached they jump across the narrow boundary before being attached to
the other grain. In contrast, Mott (1948) suggested that groups (islands) of atoms
move from one grain into the grain boundary, and that similar groups attach
themselves to the other lattice region and thus provided an explanation of the
experimentally derived high thermal activation energies (Gleiter, 1969) introduced the
crystallography to the grain boundary migration models. He pointed to the importance
of vacancies at the boundary edges with respect to the diffusion process and proposed
a model based on the motion of steps. Crystal surfaces consist of steps from which
atoms are removed. In the presence of a driving force the atoms diffuse for short
distances inside the grain boundary, before they are added again at steps of the
adjacent crystal lattice. This process is analogous to the growth of crystals from vapor.
In this model the mobility depends on both misorientation and boundary plane (that is
characterized by the step density) and explains the observed anisotropy of grain
boundary migration.
Other geometric models focus on the defect structure of the grain boundary, e.g. the
motion of steps by the movement of dislocations (King and Smith, 1980), or the
motion by a cooperative shuffling of atoms in groups (Babcock & Balluffi, 1989).
Recently, Merkle et al. (2002) provided evidence of the existence of such cooperative
atomic motion in grain boundary migration by in-situ experiments observed in high-
resolution transmission electron microscopy. Even if the metallurgists investigate
materials of exactly known composition, a lot of questions still remain: e.g. the role of
atoms inside the grain boundary such as the distance of diffusion inside the boundary
or the time atoms remain or move inside the grain boundary region.
In geomaterials grain boundary migration is complex due to the large variability that
range from pure solid-state grain boundaries to micron-sized, wide grain boundaries
that might be filled with fluids or melt.
11
1.2 The grain-scale distribution of fluids The grain-scale fluid distribution and connectivity have important consequences for
rheology and mass transfer processes. The majority of previous work has concentrated
on characterizing the fluid distribution under purely hydrostatic conditions.
Here, the fluid topology in a low porosity monophase polycrystalline aggregate is
controlled by the balance between solid-solid and solid-fluid interfacial energies, and
hence the dihedral angle θ (Fig. 1.3).
Figure 1.3: Schematic drawings showing the dihedral angle and its significance for
connectivity of fluids in texturally equilibrated porous rocks. a) the geometry of the dihedral angle θ results from balancing of grain boundary interfacial energy (γss) and solid-fluid interfacial energies (γsf); b) representation of idealized fluid distribution with cross-sections: the left grain shows a dihedral angle of less than 60° resulting in fluid distribution along a connected triple junction network; for θ > 60° (right side) however, the fluid is restricted to isolated inclusions in triple junctions or along grain boundaries (after Smith, 1964).
12
In the case of θ > 60° the fluids will be present inside isolated inclusions, whereas for
0° < θ < 60° the fluid forms an interconnected network on grain boundary triple
junctions (Holness, 1997). A dihedral angle θ = 0° results in complete wetting of grain
boundaries, but is interpreted unlikely to occur under these equilibrium conditions
(Watson & Brenan, 1987). Hess (1994) proposed that very thin films may exist even
on grain faces in equilibrium fluid topologies characterized by non-zero dihedral
angles.
The stress state of much of the solid Earth however, is governed deviatoric (= non-
hydrostatic) stresses. This affects the dihedral angle and so the fluid distribution (e.g.
Urai et al., 1986b; Tullis et al., 1996) and is supported by theoretical considerations
that show that the concept of equilibrium fluid distribution may not be applicable or
relevant during deformation (Heidug, 1991).
Several ductile deformation processes are affected by the presence of fluids as e.g.
pressure solution and recrystallization processes.
Under relatively low stresses at which dislocation creep mechanisms are slow,
pressure solution creep (dissolution-precipitation or fluid-phase diffusional creep) is
important. It is characterized by the dissolution of material at interfaces with a high
differential stress, diffusion through a fluid phase provided by stress/strain induced
gradients in solubility and precipitation at interfaces under low stress (e.g. Schutjens,
1991). The geometry of the fluid residing on the grain boundaries is still
controversially discussed. Three different models that have been proposed (den Brok
et al., 2002): i) the thin film model (Rutter, 1976; Hickman & Evans, 1991; Renard &
Ortoleva, 1997), ii) the island-channel model (Lehner, 1990; Spiers & Schutjens,
1990; Schutjens & Spiers, 1999) and iii) the island-crack model (Gratz, 1991; den
Brok, 1998) (Fig. 1.4).
In the thin film boundary model (Fig. 1.4a) the grains are separated by a thin,
structured water film with a thickness of a few nanometers. This film is proposed to
transmit the contact stress and diffusion is the process of the transport of dissolved
material. Hickman & Evans (1995) studied the morphology of a grain to grain contact
of a convex halite lens against a silica plate in the presence of brine under stress and
did not find a relief in the contact area at least at the resolution of the interferometer
(100nm). Additionally the film thickness was observed to increase with decreasing
normal stress onto the contact.
13
Figure 1.4: Schematic illustration of the grain boundary structure according to the
different models for pressure solution (after den Brok et al., 2002): a) thin film model; b) island-channel model; c) island-crack model. See text for a detailed description.
The island-channel boundary model (Fig. 1.4b) is based on the assumption that –
during pressure solution – the fluids residing in thin films are squeezed out between
the grains resulting in solid-solid contact (islands) through which the contact stresses
are transmitted and water-filled channels through which the material transport takes
place by diffusion. This microscopically rough island-channel structure is
dynamically stable.
The island-crack boundary model (Fig. 1.4c) proposes static islands that are separated
by microfracture-controlled fluid channels. In contrast to the solid-solid contact of the
island-channel model, the islands in this model contain thin films comparable to the
earlier proposed thin film boundary model. Due to the low thickness of these thin
films diffusion through the latter is rate-controlling. However compared to the thin
film model, the total diffusivity in the island-crack model is increased by the presence
of the microcracks.
At crustal levels, at which dislocation creep mechanisms are dominant, the fluids have
a significant effect on the recrystallization behaviour and microstructural evolution of
14
many minerals such as quartz (Griggs, 1974; Tullis & Yund, 1982; Jaoul et al., 1984;
Kronenberg & Tullis, 1984; Hirth & Tullis, 1992; Post & Tullis, 1998), feldspar
(Tullis et al., 1996; Dimanov et al., 1999; Post & Tullis, 1999), olivine (Karato et al.,
1986; Mei & Kohlstedt, 2000a, b) or ionic salts (Urai, 1983a, 1985; Urai et al., 1986a;
Peach et al., 2001; Watanabe & Peach, 2002, ter Heege et al., 2005).
It is argued that – in the presence of fluids – the grain boundary structure changes
during dynamic recrystallization, such that grain boundary migration is assisted by
thin fluid films residing on the grain boundaries (Urai et al., 1986b; Drury & Urai,
1990). Such fluid-filled grain boundaries were observed in natural and experimentally
deformed rocks:
One method to show the presence of such fluid films was the application of the ether
test in water containing halite samples (Spiers et al., 1986): during evaporation of the
ether the fluid film was disrupted into isolated non-volatile droplets. Urai et al.
(1986a) showed fluid films by SEM observations on deformed water-containing halite
samples: 1 month after the experiment grain boundaries showed smooth surfaces,
whereas samples annealed for one year showed grain boundaries with isolated
bubbles. The authors interpreted these results as evidence for the presence of brine
films that shrink into isolated fluid inclusions after grain boundary migration stopped.
Similar observations were shown by in-situ experiments conducted on wet bischofite,
during which water-filled grain boundaries neck down after grain boundary migration
stopped (Urai, 1987). Additionally, in these experiments some cigar-shaped fluid
inclusions were left behind the migrating grain boundary supporting the hypothesis of
the presence of brine films.
Analogous microstructures were observed in experiments on the melt topology in
partially molten mantle peridotites (Jin et al., 1994; Bai et al., 1997). During
deformation under low stresses the melt spread onto grain boundaries. After cessation
of deformation and successive reannealing the melt film pulled back to form isolated
melt inclusions. Such stress-induced grain boundary wetting was also reported from
experiments on feldspar (Tullis et al., 1996) and is suggested to be related to surface
energy anisotropies.
Indications of fluid films on migrating grain boundaries in nature were found in quartz
mylonites (Mancktelow et al., 1998; Mancktelow & Pennacchioni, 2004). Scanning
electron microscopy (SEM) observations of ‘worm-like’ structures with the tendency
15
of forming ridges along triple junction tubes were proposed to result from necking
down of former fluid films.
The phenomenon of grain boundary wetting was also observed in material sciences.
Most commonly impurities or second phases on grain boundaries inhibit or decelerate
migration. However experiments on grain boundaries in Al doped with small amounts
of Pb suggest that above a transient temperature the aluminium grain boundaries are
wetted by liquid lead being responsible for the enhanced migration rates (Molodov et
al., 1997). After deformation has stopped Pb is found in isolated inclusions on the Al
grain boundaries and support the interpretation that the liquid layer may have pulled
back into its low energy configuration.
According to a the fluid film model (Urai et al., 1986b), the fluid-filled grain
boundaries are interpreted to migrate by i) dissolution of the deformed grains, ii)
diffusion through the brine film and iii) precipitation on the low-index facets of the
recrystallized grains forming smooth grain surfaces (Fig. 1.5), comparable to the step
model of Gleiter (1969). The driving force is provided by the difference in dislocation
stored energy across the boundary. The rate of grain boundary migration assisted by
fluid films is much higher than that for dry grain boundaries (Urai et al., 1986b),
conceivably because the diffusivity in a fluid phase is dramatically higher than in a
dry grain boundary.
The migration rate is determined by whichever of the three steps of dissolution,
diffusion or precipitation is the slowest (Lehner & Bataille, 1984).
The migration is interpreted to be dependent on the film thickness (Fig. 1.6). Due to
the presence of fluids on grain boundaries the migration rate is proposed to increase,
however gradually as the assumption of equal diffusion coefficients does not hold for
very thin films compared to the bulk fluid (Rutter, 1976).
To derive the migration kinetics of fluid-filled grain boundaries quantitatively, Urai et
al. (1986b) considered two crystals of identical composition and structure but
arbitrary orientation and different dislocation density that are separated by a fluid
phase of solution of the crystals (see Fig. 1.5). The crystal with the higher dislocation
density is not in equilibrium with the fluid, which causes a local supersaturation at this
interface and results in a concentration gradient across the fluid layer.
16
Figure 1.5: Schematic illustration of fluid-assisted grain boundary migration (see text
a detailed description; after Peach et al., 2001).
Figure 1.6: Diffusion coefficient of the grain boundary fluid, based on the data of
Watanabe and Peach (2002) as a function of film thickness and the effect of the decrease in diffusion coefficient on diffusion-controlled grain boundary migration (cf. Urai et al., 1986b).
17
With the assumptions that i) the diffusion across the fluid film is rate controlling
(neglecting interface kinetics) and ii) the diffusion coefficient is identical to that of the
bulk fluid, these authors proposed the grain boundary migration to be
( )0
sgb
sol
D c c MV
t ρ−
=
with c0: concentration in the fluid in equilibrium with the unstrained crystal [mol/m3] cs: concentration in the fluid in equilibrium with the strained crystal [mol/m3] t: thickness of the fluid film [m] M: molecular weight of the solid [kg/mol] D: diffusion coefficient of the migrating fluid [m2/s] ρsol: density of the solids [kg/m3].
This fluid film model was further developed by Peach et al. (2001) and Watanabe &
Peach (2002). Besides diffusion control they included interface reaction control of the
migration rate into their calculations, as dissolution and precipitation may also be rate
controlling.
For diffusion to be rate limiting the grain boundary migration rate Vgb [m/s] is
gb
D c fVt R TΩ ∆
=
with Ω: molar volume of solid [m3/mol] ∆f: difference in elastic strain energy [J/mol] (=∆µ: difference in chemical
potential) R: gas constant [J/(mol·K)] T: temperature [K].
In the case of dissolution or precipitation reaction to be rate limiting, these authors
propose for Vgb:
gbfV l
R T∆⎛ ⎞= Ω ⎜ ⎟
⎝ ⎠
with l: appropriate reaction rate coefficient [mol/(m2·s)].
18
Dependent on conditions which allow or limit recovery processes and considering that
the parameters D, C and l are temperature dependent, Peach et al. (2001) summarized
their calculations for grain boundary migration in a general equation, that is similar to
the power low creep:
with A: constant, dependent on rate-controlling mechanism and on relative importance of subboundary vs. dislocation stored energy
E: constant of apparent activation energy, dependent on rate-controlling mechanism [J/mol]
σ: applied stress [Pa] m: constant [-], dependent on importance of subgrains (=1) vs. free
dislocations (=2).
When grain boundary movement is stopped, surface energy related forces reassert
themselves and the fluid film is interpreted to contract into rolls and bubbles (Fig.
1.7). Such a development towards equilibrium conditions is also reported form crack
healing processes (e.g. Lemmlein, 1956; Brantley et al., 1990).
The influence of surface energy related forces was also shown in uniaxial
densification tests on fine grained sodium nitrate aggregates in the presence of sodium
nitrate saturated solution (Visser, 1999). For grain sizes smaller than 20 µm in the low
stress regime the strain rates decreased with decreasing grain size, and these
observations were attributed to the effect of surface energy forces.
Additionally Visser (1999) developed models for mass transfer processes of
crystalline aggregates containing a fluid phase that include both stress and surface
related driving forces.
From the models it was concluded that the relative driving forces are strongly
dependent on amongst others grain size, applied stress and interfacial energies. Based
on these observations distinct fields in stressed systems were delineated in which
either stress-driven solution-precipitation creep may occur or surface-energy
controlled neck growth or grain boundary healing processes may predominate.
exp
mgb
EV AR T
σ−⎛ ⎞= ⎜ ⎟⎝ ⎠
19
Figure 1.7: Schematic drawing illustrating the formation of arrays of fluid inclusions
in a grain boundary containing a fluid film during migration (from Urai, 1983b).
In the following the criteria are briefly presented together with the diagrams Visser
plotted for the halite-brine system (Fig. 1.8):
i) Criterion 1, for the condition of zero driving force for solution-precipitation creep,
ii) Criterion 2, for the condition of zero driving force for neck growth and
iii) Criterion 3, for grain boundary healing versus a dynamically wetted island-
channel structure.
20
Figure 1.8: Maps of material transport mechanism fields derived by the application
of the Visser criteria for the NaCl-brine system (from Visser, 1999). a) criterion 1 separates the fields for pressure solution and contact healing for conditions with zero driving force for solution-precipitation creep; b) criteria 2a and 2b distinguish the fields for marginal dissolution and neck growth for conditions of zero driving force for neck growth; c) criteria 3a and 3b separate fields of dynamically wetted island-channel structure and grain boundary healing.
21
Criterion 1:
Here the driving force is described by
4e sl
v
ae dσ γ
− ,
with e
v
aeσ = stress related term and
4 sl
dγ = surface energy related term.
with σe: surface-energy-controlled yield stress [Pa] γsl: fluid-solid surface energy [J/m2] ev: volumetric strain [-] a: packing constant [-] d: grain size [m]
, i.e. the driving force for solution-precipitation creep can be decreased by surface
energy effects.
If the surface related energy term ( 4 sl
dγ ) exceeds the stress energy related one ( e
v
aeσ ),
the grain-to-grain contact will cement-up; however if e
v
aeσ > 4 sl
dγ , densification will
continue, and for the case of e
v
aeσ >>> 4 sl
dγ pressure solution will proceed according
to the conventional models (e.g. Spiers et al., 1990).
By replacing d with 2rgr and e
v
aeσ with σn, the dimensionless criterion is derived, that
separates the contact healing from the pressure solution field (Fig. 1.8a):
gr
ln ln ln 2 r
s sn sl
R T R Tσ γ⎛ ⎞⎛ ⎞Ω Ω
= +⎜ ⎟⎜ ⎟ ⎜ ⎟⎝ ⎠ ⎝ ⎠
with rgr: radius of curvature of grains at the pore wall [m] σn: normal stress [Pa] Ωs: molar volume of solid phase [m3/mol] T: absolute temperature [K] R: molar gas constant [J/(K·mol)]
22
Criterion 2:
The driving force for neck growth in turn, can be reduced due to the effects of stress.
In this criterion it is considered that the dihedral angle (θ) at the contact margin may
be different from the equilibrium wetting angle (θeq). This results in a local driving
force that changes the contact geometry and is expressed by the term
cos cos2 2
eqθθ⎛ ⎞−⎜ ⎟
⎝ ⎠ and opposed to the term scm
ssl
r fγ⎛ ⎞
∆⎜ ⎟Ω⎝ ⎠
with rcm: radius of curvature at contact margin [m] θ: dihedral angle [°] θeq: equilibrium dihedral angle [°] ∆fs: excess (Helmholtz) free energy at the neck region [J/mol]
When both terms balance each other (equilibrium conditions), the zero driving force
condition for neck growth is
cos cos2 2
seqssl
cm
fr RT RT
θγ θ⎛ ⎞ ∆Ω − =⎜ ⎟
⎝ ⎠
This condition separates the neck growth field from the marginal dissolution field
(Fig. 1.8b).
As both elastic and plastic energy can attribute to the excess free energy (∆fs), Visser
distinguishes two extreme situations:
Criterion 2a, in which purely elastic strain energy exists at the contact margin: 2
2s snf
Eσ
∆ = Ω
with E: Youngs modulus [Pa]
The dimensionless equation is then
1 1 2ln ln ln ln cos cos2 2 2 2
s s seqn sl
cm
ERT r RT RT
θσ γ θ⎡ ⎤⎛ ⎞⎛ ⎞ ⎛ ⎞⎛ ⎞Ω Ω Ω= + + −⎢ ⎥⎜ ⎟⎜ ⎟ ⎜ ⎟⎜ ⎟
⎝ ⎠ ⎝ ⎠⎝ ⎠ ⎝ ⎠ ⎣ ⎦
23
Criterion 2b, for dislocation stored energy to be the dominant contribution at the
contact margin:
( )s sdislf Wρ∆ = Ω
with 2
2 2
2 ndisl b G
σρ ≈ and 212
W Gb=
with ρdisl: local dislocation density at the neck margin [m-2] W: dislocation line energy [J/m] b: Burgers vector [m] G: shear modulus [Pa]
This results in
( )22 sns
s
RTfGRT
σ Ω∆ =
Ω
And the respective criterion is expressed by
1 1ln ln ln ln cos cos2 2 2 2
s s seqn sl
cm
GRT r RT RT
θσ γ θ⎡ ⎤⎛ ⎞⎛ ⎞ ⎛ ⎞⎛ ⎞Ω Ω Ω= + + −⎢ ⎥⎜ ⎟⎜ ⎟ ⎜ ⎟⎜ ⎟
⎝ ⎠ ⎝ ⎠⎝ ⎠ ⎝ ⎠ ⎣ ⎦
Criterion 3:
However, not only the driving forces at the contact margins need to be considered.
Neck growth arguments may also be applicable within grain boundaries with an
island-channel structure, describing the growth of islands and hence grain boundary
healing. Here the island-island contacts are treated as small necks over an area
fraction α. Thus the driving force is balanced by the terms: cos cos2 2
eqθθ⎛ ⎞−⎜ ⎟
⎝ ⎠ and
sims
sl
r fγ⎛ ⎞
∆⎜ ⎟Ω⎝ ⎠.
with α: area fraction occupied by small necks [-] rim: radius of curvature of island margin [m]
The only difference to criterion 2 is the parameter ρisl which here describes the radius
of an island margin. The respective diagram (Fig. 1.8c) separates the pressure solution
24
field with an active dynamically stable island-channel structure from the contact
healing field.
Analogous to criterion 2, this criterion can be described for the two extreme
situations, i.e that the excess free energy (∆fs) is contributed by purely elastic or
dislocation stored energies.
Criterion 3a, for elastic energy to be the dominant contribution at the island margin:
1 1 2ln ln ln ln cos cos2 2 2 2
s s seqn sl
im
ERT r RT RT
θσ γ θα
⎡ ⎤⎛ ⎞⎛ ⎞ ⎛ ⎞⎛ ⎞Ω Ω Ω= + + −⎢ ⎥⎜ ⎟⎜ ⎟ ⎜ ⎟⎜ ⎟
⎝ ⎠ ⎝ ⎠⎝ ⎠ ⎝ ⎠ ⎣ ⎦
Criterion 3b, in which purely dislocation stored energy exists at the island margin:
1 1ln ln ln ln cos cos2 2 2 2
s s seqn sl
im
GRT r RT RT
θσ γ θα
⎡ ⎤⎛ ⎞⎛ ⎞ ⎛ ⎞⎛ ⎞Ω Ω Ω= + + −⎢ ⎥⎜ ⎟⎜ ⎟ ⎜ ⎟⎜ ⎟
⎝ ⎠ ⎝ ⎠⎝ ⎠ ⎝ ⎠ ⎣ ⎦
Postulating a dynamically stable island-channel structure from which stress is
released, Visser interpreted that only the surface energy drives the system to its
equilibrium conditions. This results in growth of islands and shrinking of channels
and hence in sealing the boundary by internal redistribution of fluid and solid in the
contact region. Such islands are proposed to grow preferentially close to the contact
rims and promote the sealing of the grain-to-grain contact which in turn prevents
transport in our out the boundary region and thus traps the fluids in isolated
inclusions. Finally, Visser (1999) concluded that pressure solution will slow down
and finally stop after attaining a strain and grain size dependent ‘yield stress’.
1.3 Aim of this study The principal aim of this study is to get a better insight into the properties of fluids in
grain boundaries, such as morphology, connectivity and their effect on
recrystallization processes. Such an understanding is required for modelling and
predicting transport and mechanical properties of rocks deforming under metamorphic
conditions. Although there is strong evidence for the presence of fluid-filled grain
25
boundaries during recrystallization under non-equilibrium conditions, their detailed
nature is still poorly understood. Therefore in this study the structure of fluid-filled
grain boundaries was observed in experimentally and naturally recrystallized samples.
As the detailed morphology of fluid-bearing boundaries has been only inferred
indirectly so far, direct observations on their geometry were conducted by using the
newly developed see-through apparatus that enables deformation under constant fluid
pressure.
1.4 Overview of this thesis In chapter 2 the effect of water on recrystallization processes and grain boundary
morphology in naturally deformed marble mylonites during shear zone evolution is
presented. Calcite marble mylonites from the Schneeberg Complex (Southern Tyrole,
Italy) are compared to those from the Naxos Metamorphic Core Complex (Greece).
While the two settings are characterized by similar lithology and geological history,
they are different in the nature of fluids present during late-stage deformation. The
respective shear zone profiles were sampled and chemical data was derived from
XRF, microprobe and stable isotopes. The microstructures were studied by both
optical microscopy of thin sections and scanning electron microscopy of broken and
polished & etched samples and finally compared with the recrystallization behavior of
other rock forming minerals in the presence of fluids.
Chapter 3 describes the experimental investigation into the role of brine on the
microstructural evolution and grain boundary morphology in halite. Although there is
evidence for fluid-filled grain boundaries in recrystallizing halite from experiments
and natural samples, their detailed nature is under debate. One problem of the fluid
film model was that the observations were made after removal of the stress, which
could have led to a redistribution of the fluid by viscous flow. To avoid such a
redistribution of fluids after stress release, in this study compacted, synthetic,
polycrystalline wet halite samples were annealed under atmospheric conditions,
without deformation. The microstuctural evolution and grain boundary morphology of
the statically recrystallizing samples was studied by scanning electron and reflected
light microscopy of surfaces that were either polished and etched or broken.
As these interpretations of grain boundary structure in experimentally deformed wet
salt samples annealed statically at room temperature were based on indirect evidence
from reflected light microscopy and conventional SEM, chapter 4 presents direct
26
observations of fluid-filled grain boundaries using the cryo-scanning electron
microscope (cryo-SEM) in which the grain boundary fluids were frozen before
breaking the samples. In order to characterize the crystallographic nature of grain
boundaries, detailed Electron Backscatter Diffraction (EBSD) analysis was used. The
results were compared with existing models of recrystallization and grain growth
processes.
Chapter 5 presents in-situ deformation experiments in transmitted light microscopy
as they allow continuous and real-time observation of the whole range of processes
involved during fluid assisted grain boundary migration. Therefore, a new see-through
deformation apparatus with an integrated controlled pore fluid pressure system was
developed. The experiments were carried out on bischofite in the presence of
saturated solution at different temperatures. The microstructural evolution was studied
during and after deformation, with a special focus on migrating fluid-filled grain
boundaries and their break-up into arrays of isolated inclusions. The rates of grain
boundary migration were measured, assigned to the different temperatures and strain
rates and compared with observations and models from previous studies.
Chapters 2 to 5 are written as self-standing entities, published, submitted or intended
to be published as separate papers. As a result some repetition was unavoidable.
1.5 Parts of the thesis which have been published
Articles:
Schenk, O. & Urai, J.L. submitted. The migration of fluid-filled grain boundaries in recrystallizing synthetic bischofite – first results of in-situ HPHT deformation experiments in transmitted light. Journal Of Metamorphic Geology.
Schenk, O., Urai, J. L. & Piazolo, S. submitted. Structure of grain boundaries in wet, synthetic polycrystalline, statically recrystallizing halite – evidence from cryo-SEM observations. Geofluids.
Schenk, O., Urai, J. L. & Evans, B. submitted. The effect of water on recrystallization behavior and grain boundary morphology in calcite – observations of natural marble mylonites. Journal Of Structural Geology.
Schenk, O. & Urai, J. L. 2004. Microstructural evolution and grain boundary structure during static recrystallization in synthetic polycrystals of sodium chloride containing saturated brine. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 146, 671-682.
27
Conference proceedings:
Schenk, O. & Urai, J. L. 2004. The effect of brine on grain boundary structure in synthetic halite polycrystals recrystallized under static conditions: observation from conventional and cryogenic SEM. TSK X. Aachen, Germany, 81.
Schenk, O., Urai, J. L. & Evans, B. 2003. The influence of grain boundary fluids on the recrystallization behavior in calcite: a comparison of "dry" and "wet" marble mylonites. EOS Trans. AGU 84 (46), Fall Meet. Suppl., Abstract T41B-07. San Francisco, USA.
Urai, J. L. & Schenk, O. 2003. Microstructural evolution and grain boundary structure during static recrystallization in synthetic polycrystals of sodium chloride containing saturated brine. EOS Trans. AGU 84 (46), Fall Meet. Suppl., Abstract T42A-0284. San Francisco, USA.
Schenk, O. & Urai, J. L. 2003. Microstructural evolution and grain boundary structure during static recrystallization of synthetic polycrystals of sodium chloride containing a saturated salt solution. DRT 2003. Geosciences Rennes, St. Malo, France, 138.
de Bresser, H., Urai, J. L., Schenk, O. & Olgaard, D. 2003. Strength and microstructure of wet and dry recrystallizing marble. In: DRT 2003. Geosciences Rennes, St. Malo, France, 33.
Urai, J. L., De Bresser, H., Schenk, O. & Olgaard, D. 2002. Effect of water on the strength and microstructure of recrystallizing marble. VMSG Symposium 2002 "Dynamics of the Earth and Mars", Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands.
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Spiers, C. J. & Schutjens, P. 1990. Densification of crystalline aggregates by fluid-phase diffusional creep. In: Deformation processes in minerals, ceramics and rocks (edited by Barber, D. J. & Meredith, P. D.). Unwin Hyman, 334-353.
Spiers, C. J., Schutjens, P. M. T. M., Brzesowsky, R. H., Peach, C. J., Liezenberg, J. L. & Zwart, H. J. 1990. Experimental determination of constitutive parameters governing creep of rocksalt by pressure solution. In: Deformation mechanisms, rheology and tectonics (edited by Knipe, R. J. & Rutter, E. H.) 54, Leeds, United Kingdom, 215-227.
ter Heege, J. H., De Bresser, J. H. P. & Spiers, C. J. 2005. Dynamic recrystallization of wet synthetic polycrystalline halite: dependence of grain size distribution on flow stress, temperature and strain. Tectonophysics 396(1-2), 35-57.
Tullis, J. & Yund, R. A. 1982. Grain growth kinetics of quartz and calcite aggregates. Journal of Geology 90, 301-318.
Tullis, J., Yund, R. A. & Farver, J. 1996. Deformation-enhanced fluid distribution in feldspar aggregates and implications for ductile shear zones. Geology 24(1), 63-66.
Turnbull, D. 1951. Theory of grain boundary migration rates. Transactions of the Metallurgical Society AIME 191, 1-7.
Urai, J. L. 1983a. Water assisted dynamic recrystallization and weakening in polycrystalline bischofite. Tectonophysics 96(1-2), 125-157.
Urai, J. L. 1983b. Deformation of Wet Salt Rocks. Unpublished PhD thesis, Rijksuniversiteit Utrecht, 223 pp.
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Urai, J. L. 1985. Water-enhanced dynamic recrystallization and solution transfer in experimentally deformed carnallite. Tectonophysics 120(3-4), 285-317.
Urai, J. L., Means, W. D. & Lister, G. S. 1986a. Dynamic recrystallization of minerals. In: Mineral and rock deformation; laboratory studies; the Paterson volume. AGU Geophysical Monograph (edited by Hobbs, B. E. & Heard, H. C.) 36, 161-199.
Urai, J. L., Spiers, C. J., Zwart, H. J. & Lister, G. S. 1986b. Weakening of rock salt by water during long-term creep. Nature (London) 324(6097), 554-557.
Urai, J. L., Spiers, C. J., Peach, C., Franssen, R. C. M. W. & Liezenberg, J. L. 1987. Deformation mechanisms operating in naturally deformed halite rocks as deduced from microstructural investigations. Geologie en Mijnbouw 66, 165-176.
Visser, H. J. M. 1999. Mass transfer processes in crystalline aggregates containing a fluid phase. PhD thesis, Universiteit Utrecht, 244 pp.
Vrolijk, P. 1987. Tectonically driven fluid flow in the Kodiak accretionary complex, Alaska. Geology 15, 466-469.
Watanabe, T. & Peach, C. J. 2002. Electrical impedance measurement of plastically deforming halite rocks at 125°C and 50 MPa. Journal of Geophysical Research 107(B1), ECV 2-1 - 2-12.
Watson, E. B. & Brenan, J. M. 1987. Fluids in the lithosphere; 1, Experimentally-determined wetting characteristics of CO (sub 2) -H (sub 2) O fluids and their implications for fluid transport, host-rock physical properties, and fluid inclusion formation. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 85(4), 497.
32
Chapter 2:
The effect of water on recrystallization behavior and grain boundary morphology in calcite – observations of natural marble mylonites1
2.0 Abstract
Fluids are inferred to play a major role in the deformation and recrystallization of
many minerals (e.g. quartz, olivine, halite, feldspar). In this study we sought to
identify the effect of fluids on grain boundary morphology and recrystallization
processes in marble mylonites during shear zone evolution. We compared the
chemistry, microstructure and mesostructure of calcite marble mylonites from the
Schneeberg Complex, Southern Tyrole, Italy, to that from the Naxos Metamorphic
Core Complex, Greece. These two areas were selected for comparison because they
have similar lithology and resemble each other in chemical composition. In addition,
calcite-dolomite geothermometry indicates similar temperatures for shear zone
formation: 279 ±25 (Schneeberg Complex) and 271 ±15 °C (Naxos high-grade core).
However, the two settings are different in the nature of the fluids present during the
shear zone evolution: In the Schneeberg mylonites, both the alteration of minerals
during retrograde metamorphism in the neighboring micaschists and the existence of
veins suggest that aqueous fluids were present during mylonitization. The absence of
these features in the Naxos samples indicates that aqueous fluids were not as prevalent
1 Schenk, O., Urai, J.L. & Evans, B., in press. The effect of water on recrystallization behavior and
grain boundary morphology in calcite – observations of natural marble mylonites. Journal of Structural Geology
33
during deformation. This conclusion is also supported by the stable isotope signature.
Observations of broken and planar surfaces using optical and scanning electron
microscopes did not indicate major differences between the two mylonites: Grain
boundaries in both settings display pores with shapes controlled by crystallography,
and have pore morphologies that are similar to observations from crack and grain-
boundary healing experiments. Grain size reduction was predominantly the result of
subgrain rotation recrystallization. However, the coarse grains inside the wet
protomylonites (Schneeberg) are characterized by intracrystalline shear zones.
2.1 Introduction
In many orogenic belts, including, for example, in the Alps (Pfiffner, 1982;
Heitzmann, 1987; Burkhard, 1993), Spain (Behrmann, 1983), or Canada (Busch &
Van der Pluijm, 1995), marbles often accumulate large amounts of strain in localized
shear zones that involve deformation by crystal plastic processes (e.g. Bestmann et al.
(2000); Ulrich et al. (2002)). Such late-stage shear zones are formed under a variety of
thermal regimes and tectonic settings, but often record deformation at relatively low
pressure and temperatures (Bestmann et al., 2000). Owing to the extreme localization
of strain, such marble sequences are thought to play a key role in crustal deformation
processes, and have often been a subject of field studies (Schmid et al., 1977; Pfiffner,
1982; Behrmann, 1983; Heitzmann, 1987; Burkhard, 1993; Busch & Van der Pluijm,
1995; Badertscher & Burkhard, 2000; Bestmann et al., 2000; Badertscher et al., 2002;
Ulrich et al., 2002). The microstructures within these shear zones contain important
information on sense of shear, recrystallization mechanisms, and final grain size. The
stress conditions can be estimated by applying various flow laws, derived from
experimental studies (Schmid et al., 1980; Rowe & Rutter, 1990; Walker et al., 1990;
Rutter, 1995; Covey-Crump, 1998; de Bresser, 2002; Renner & Evans, 2002;
Herwegh et al., 2003). However, despite extensive field and laboratory investigation,
many questions remain concerning the mechanical behavior of carbonates, the exact
rheology appropriate to describe natural deformation, particularly at very large strains
(Pieri et al., 2001) and the influence of such variables as pore fluids, second phases
and chemical solutes.
One significant consideration for crustal deformation is the presence or absence of
water. Experimental deformation of wet aggregates indicate that fluids have a major
34
effect on mechanical properties and microstructural evolution of many minerals,
including quartz (Griggs, 1974; Tullis & Yund, 1982; Jaoul et al., 1984; Kronenberg
& Tullis, 1984; Hirth & Tullis, 1992; Post & Tullis, 1998), ionic salts (Skrotzki &
Welch, 1983; Urai, 1983, 1985; Urai et al., 1986b; Spiers et al., 1990; Spiers &
Brzesowsky, 1993; Peach et al., 2001; Watanabe & Peach, 2002; Schenk & Urai,
2004), feldspar (Dimanov et al., 1999), olivine (Mei & Kohlstedt, 2000b, a) or
clinopyroxene (Chen & Kohlstedt, 2003; Kohlstedt et al., 2003). In these minerals
fluids affect point defect concentrations and diffusion rates, enhance grain boundary
mobility, or alter dislocation dynamics. At low temperatures, solution transfer
processes may operate.
Considering the importance of deformation of marble formations in the processes of
mountain building, it is surprising that only a few laboratory studies have been
conducted to investigate the influence of fluids on the mechanical properties and
recrystallization behavior of calcite.
The results of comparisons between wet and dry samples are somewhat equivocal.
(Adams & Nicolson, 1900) deformed Carrara marble at a temperature of 300°C in the
presence of water, but did not observe differences with similar tests under dry
conditions at 300 and 400°C. Rutter (1974) deformed coarse-grained Carrara marble
and fine-grained Solnhofen marble, with and without interstitial water in the range of
20 to 500°C. He concluded that the presence of fluids did not significantly affect the
mechanical (rheological) behavior of the coarse-grained marble, but that the strength
of the fine-grained marble was reduced, at least at low temperatures. The presence of
porosity in the Solnhofen marble is significant, and the strength reductions in the
Solnhofen may have been related to weakening caused by compaction with an
associated increase in pore fluid pressure.
At higher temperatures, in dense, coarse-grained marbles, the presence of water seems
to weaken calcite rocks only by a small amount. In a few experiments done on
nominally drained samples of synthetic marble at 700 °C, confining pressure of 100
MPa; and strain rates ranging from 10-3 to 2 · 10-5 s-1, Olgaard (1985) found that wet
samples were only a few percent weaker than dry ones. In the most recent study, de
Bresser et al. (2005) compared the mechanical properties of pre-dried Carrara marble
deformed in axial compression at temperatures between 600 – 1000°C; confining
pressure of 300 MPa, and strain rate of 10-5 s-1 with that of wet, undrained Carrara
35
samples, deformed under the same conditions. At almost all conditions the wet
samples were only somewhat weaker than the dry ones. The final grain shape in the
wet samples was somewhat rounder than the dry samples.
Tullis & Yund (1982) and Olgaard (1985) studied the influence of water on the grain
growth kinetics in calcite aggregates. The annealing experiments on Solnhofen
limestone of Tullis & Yund (1982) at temperatures of 650 – 1000 °C and confining
pressures of 200 to 1500 MPa indicated faster growth rates of wet compared to the dry
samples (but the effect of water is not as pronounced as it is for novaculite (quartz). In
grain growth experiments on fine-grained synthetic calcite, Olgaard & Evans (1988)
concluded that normal grain growth in synthetic marble with added water was faster
than that in samples containing carbon dioxide inclusions, but slower than that in very
pure synthetic marbles with few or no fluid inclusions.
In this study we compare natural marble mylonites that recrystallized under varying
pore-fluid conditions. The extent of the interaction between the marble rocks and the
pore fluids contained within them has been characterized mainly by stable isotope
studies (Burkhard & Kerrich, 1988; Baker & Matthews, 1995; Lewis et al., 1998;
Matthews et al., 1999; Kirschner & Kennedy, 2001). We focus on the effect of fluids
on the grain boundary morphology and recrystallization behavior. We sampled marble
shear zones from the Schneeberg complex (Italian/Austrian Alps) and the high-grade
core of Naxos, Greece, both having a similar geological history, but with different
amounts of fluids present during late-stage deformation. Across the respective shear
zone profiles we looked at the microstructures in thin sections together with chemical
data derived from XRF and stable isotopes. In addition the mylonite samples were
broken and investigated under the SEM, as done previously, on hot-isostatically
pressed synthetic marble (Olgaard & FitzGerald, 1993) and on natural quartz
mylonites from the Simplon Fault Zone (Mancktelow et al., 1998). In a more recent
paper, Mancktelow & Pennacchioni (2004) compared natural quartz-feldspar
mylonites with variable amounts of water present during mylonitization with respect
to the grain boundary structure. They conclude that water-rich fluids enhance the
grain boundary mobility in quartz significantly.
36
2.2 Geological setting and sampling
2.2.1 Schneeberg complex
The Schneeberg Complex is a Paleozoic subunit of the Ötztal group (Ötztal-Stubai
Complex, Eastern Alps), NNW of Meran (Italy) (Fig. 2.1), and located between the
rest of the Ötztal and the Texel group, which lies to the south (Hoinkes et al., 1987;
Schmid & Haas, 1989). From NW towards SE, the Schneeberg Complex is composed
of the Monotonous Series, the Heterogeneous Series and the Laaser Series (Sölva et
al., in press). The rocks of the Laaser Series are pure, white marbles and garnet-mica
schists intercalated by layers of quartzite, amphibolite and calc-schist.
Whereas the dominant deformation structures of the Ötztal basement are Variscan, the
most southeastern part (Schneeberg Complex and Texel group) is overprinted by
strong Alpine deformation (Sölva et al., 2001) that formed a well-known set of fold
interference patterns with steep fold axes called ‘Schlingen’. Pre-alpine deformation is
preserved only as relicts in garnets (Sölva et al., 2001).
The Alpine deformational history is related to the eo-Alpine collision, with the
evolution from high-grade to lower greenschist facies metamorphic conditions
indicating crustal uplift (Spalla, 1990). Five deformation stages (D1-D5) can be
distinguished. Kinematic and geometric shear sense indicators are in agreement with
observations of (Sölva et al., in press) who assume that the high pressure rocks of the
Texel Complex were continuously exhumed relative to the Ötztal-Stubai Complex, by
motion along the NW dipping Schneeberg Normal Fault Zone (SNFZ). This fault
zone was active from amphibolite to lower greenschist facies (D1-D4). The
microstructure indicates that deformation was accommodated by a mixture of crystal
plasticity and cataclastic mechanisms. As temperature decreased, cataclasis became
more dominant (particularly in stage D5) (Sölva et al., in press), resulting in
progressive strain localization in marble units of the Laaser Series.
As consequence of this localization, the initially coarse-grained marble underwent
dramatic grain size reduction.
The area sampled in this study is located in the Schneeberg Complex between the
L’Altissima (Hohe Wilde) and Cima Fiammante (Lodner) within the Laaser Series.
37
We focused on D4 shear zones, together with their respective marble host rocks and
adjacent garnet-mica schists. Sample locations are shown in Figure 2.1. See Table 2.1
for GPS-data and additional observations.
Table 2.1: Overview of samples described in this paper.
GPS a samples
R H lithology recrystallization XRF ICP isotopes thermometry
S-1 b 06 55 372 51 79 058 marble protolith S
S-2 b 06 55 372 51 79 058 micaschist -
N-1a1 06 54 960 51 80 444 marble protolith x
N-1b1 06 54 960 51 80 444 marble protolith x x N-1
N-1c1 06 54 960 51 80 444 marble protolith x
N-2a2a 06 54 942 51 80 486 marble mylonite x
N-2a2b 06 54 942 51 80 486 marble protomylonite x
N-2d 06 54 942 51 80 486 marble mylonite x N-2
N-2h 06 54 942 51 80 486 marble mylonite x x x
E-1-1 06 54 867 51 80 170 marble mylonite x x x x
E-1-2 06 54 867 51 80 170 marble protomylonite x x
E-1-3 06 54 867 51 80 170 marble protomylonite x
E-1-4 06 54 867 51 80 170 marble protolith x
E-2 06 54 867 51 80 170 micaschist -
E-3 c 06 54 867 51 80 170 marble mylonite x x
E
E-4 06 54 867 51 80 170 marble mylonite x x x
M-8-1a 06 54 567 51 78 999 marble mylonite x x
M-8-1b 06 54 567 51 78 999 marble protomylonite x
M-8-2a 06 54 567 51 78 999 marble mylonite x x
M-8-2b 06 54 567 51 78 999 marble protomylonite x
M-8-3a 06 54 567 51 78 999 marble protomylonite x x
M-8-3b 06 54 567 51 78 999 marble mylonite x
M-8-3c 06 54 567 51 78 999 marble protomylonite x
M-8-4 06 54 567 51 78 999 marble protolith x
Schn
eebe
rg C
ompl
ex
M-8
M-8-5 06 54 567 51 78 999 marble protolith x
8a1a 37°05'36.4" 025°28'53.0" marble mylonite x x x x
8a1b 37°05'36.4" 025°28'53.0" marble protomylonite x 8
8a1c 37°05'36.4" 025°28'53.0" marble protolith x x
11a1a 37°05'12.6" 025°28'20.0" marble mylonite x x x
11a1b 37°05'12.6" 025°28'20.0" marble protomylonite x
11a1c 37°05'12.6" 025°28'20.0" marble protolith x x
11a2 37°05'12.6" 025°28'20.0" marble mylonite x
11a3 37°05'12.6" 025°28'20.0" marble protolith x Nax
os h
igh
grad
e co
re
11
11b 37°05'12.6" 025°28'20.0" micaschist -
a map datums: UTM European Datum 1950 (Schneeberg Comple); WGS84 (Naxos high grade core) b in distance to the late stage shear zones c several generations of syndeformational veins; thin section used for cathodoluminescence
38
Figure 2.1: Geological map of the Southwestern tip of the Schneeberg Complex
(coordinate system: UTM European Datum 1950). The letters contained in boxes indicate the collection locations for samples listed in Tables 2.1-2.5.
39
2.2.2 Naxos high-grade core
Naxos, Greece, the largest Cycladic island in the Aegean Sea (Fig. 2.2), belongs to the
Attic Cycladic Metamorphic Belt (Lister et al., 1984; Feenstra, 1985), and was
affected by at least two Alpine regional tectono-metamorphic events (Urai et al.,
1990). The first of the two, the main Alpine orogeny (Eocene) was due to the closure
of the Mesozoic Pindos Ocean (Hansen & Heide, 1999). This early compressional
tectonic phase (D1) ended 50 to 40 Ma ago and involved subduction of continental
margin material, generation of a nappe pile and regional high-pressure-low-
temperature (HPLT) metamorphism (M1).
Figure 2.2: Simplified geological map of Naxos (after Urai et al., 1990) with a
detailed overview of the studied outcrops (coordinate system: WGS 84). That compressional phase was followed by a period of extensional tectonics (D2) in
Early Miocene (Urai et al., 1990). The extensional phase probably accompanied a
40
southward retreat of the N-dipping subduction zone south of Crete (Urai & Feenstra,
2001), during which a back-arc basin formed with thinned crust, high heat flow, rapid
uplift of lower crustal rocks, and intrusion of granitoid magmas (Pe-Piper et al.,
1997). Also associated with this extensional phase was a regional greenschist facies
metamorphic event (M2a; ~25Ma) followed by localized deformation under high-
temperature-medium-pressure (HTMP; ~700 °C and 0.6 GPa) metamorphism (M2b;
~20-16Ma) (Buick & Holland, 1989). The elongate thermal dome that resulted
dominates the structure of the island. The metamorphic zonation is nearly concentric
with the dome, as shown in Figure 2.2 by six metamorphic isograds mapped in pelitic
and bauxitic units (Jansen & Schuiling, 1976). The core of the dome consists of
migmatized Hercynian basement, inside of which rafts of coarse-grained, pure, white
marble exist. They contain synmetamorphic pegmatites and thin boudinaged
amphibolites showing N-S extension during M2 metamorphism. The core is
surrounded by a cover of marble and schist (Hansen & Heide, 1999); together these
units are described as metamorphic core complex. This entire core complex is
strongly deformed due to a major crustal shear zone that was active during M2
metamorphism (Urai & Feenstra, 2001). The deformation that resulted is visible as
km-scale isoclinal folds with fold axes trending N-S. These folds are coaxially
refolded by open, upright folds (Urai et al., 1990). This regional fabric forms the
structural dome with its foliation warping over the migmatite core (Urai & Feenstra,
2001).
With decreasing temperatures during further extension and uplift, the deformation was
strongly localized in mylonite zones (D3) inside the marble units and mica schists.
These post-M2b mylonites are characterized by extreme grain size reduction (Urai et
al., 1990) and are parallel to the local orientation of bedding or to older high-grade
schistosity.
The samples of the Naxos core complex for this study were taken inside a marble raft
in the high-grade core close to Kinidaros, where very fine-grained post-M2b marble
mylonites are embedded in the very coarse-grained calcite marble of high purity (see
Figure 2.2 and Table 2.1 for details). As was done for the Schneeberg rocks, oriented
samples were taken from the marble mylonites, as well as from the respective host
rocks and adjacent mica schists.
41
2.3 Observations
2.3.1 Schneeberg complex
Mesostructures
The Laaser Series rocks consist of marbles, garnet-mica schists and minor intercalated
layers of amphibolite, quartzite, dolomite marble and calc-schist. At a distance of ~ 10
m from the D4 shear zones, the calcite marble is white, pure, and coarse-grained. The
marble is dominantly calcite, but also contains small amounts of quartz and rarely
mica. Inside the shear zones, the fine-grained marble mylonites are white, porcelain-
like layers alternating with yellowish bands of ferrous compounds formed by
alteration of thin mica layers. Thin (mm scale) calcite veins inside the mylonites were
observed in some outcrops.
The marble shear zones are up to 5m thick and often have alternating layers with
different degrees of recrystallization. The D4 mylonitic lineation trends top towards
WNW, i.e., the shear sense is sinistral, agreeing with (Sölva et al., 2001).
The mica schists in the sampling area contain euhedral garnets with sizes up to
10 mm. Away from the shear zones, the garnets are brownish-red, but close to the
shear zones the mica schists are often intercalated as 3 to 10 cm thick layers with
garnets often being greenish. The mylonitization is restricted to the weak calcite
marble units.
Microstructures
Grains in the calcite marble host rocks are coarse (up to 2 mm) with lobate grain
boundaries, suggesting dynamic recrystallization at high temperatures (Fig. 2.3a). The
host rock is predominantly calcite, but also contains small amounts of randomly
distributed second phases with a volume fraction of less than ~ 2 %. Quartz grains are
commonly rounded with sizes up to 100 µm, while muscovite occurs as flakes up to
200 µm in size.
Inside the shear zones, the protomylonites show the typical core and mantle structure.
Judging from optical extinctions, the subgrains in the core structures have the same
size as the fine mantle grains, suggesting that subgrain rotation recrystallization was
the dominant recrystallization process.
42
Figure 2.3: Optical micrographs (transmitted light, crossed nicols) of marble samples
from the Schneeberg area (a-c) and the Naxos high-grade core (d-f). a) coarse-grained, dynamically recrystallized marble host rock in the Schneeberg complex, not affected by late-stage D4 shear zones. b) typical D4-protomylonite of the Schneeberg Complex; subsequent recrystallization by subgrain rotation results in the core and mantle structure; recrystallization commonly starts at twin boundaries (tb);in addition, the coarse, old grains are often cut by intragranular microcracks (im). c) typical mylonitic microstructure due to complete recrystallization during strain localization. d) dynamically recrystallized, coarse-grained, marble host rock inside the high-grade core of Naxos, with subgrain rotation recrystallization as dominant recrystallization process and thin twins being slightly curved. e) protomylonite with the typical core and mantle structure, presumably resulting from subgrain rotation recrystallization. f) mylonitic microstructure due to complete recrystallization during strain localization.
43
The coarse grains are characterized by undulatory extinction and kinking, both
indications of strong plastic deformation. The presence of thick curved twins (type III
after Burkhard (1993)) inside the coarse grains, and the fact that twin boundaries
appear to have migrated suggests that mylonitization temperatures were higher than
250 °C (Burkhard, 1993; Ferrill et al., 2004). The coarse grains are often cut by linear
arrays of fine grains. These features are likely intragranular microcracks that have, in
turn, been recrystallized. In addition, recrystallized grains are often found along twin
boundaries, forming intragranular shear zones (Fig. 2.3b). Within the mylonite zones,
the marbles are completely recrystallized (Fig. 2.3c) with final grain sizes of 5 to 20
µm. The grain size data is derived by measuring the equidimensional circular
diameter on polished and etched surfaces (see Herwegh (2000)). Applying the mean
square root grain size of 10 µm to Rutter’s (1995) sub-grain rotation piezometer
differential stresses of 107 MPa are calculated. In some outcrops the mylonites
contain calcite veins (Fig. 2.4a) which are deformed and recrystallized again.
The garnet-mica schists of the Laaser Series consist of quartz, mica, feldspar and
almandine-rich garnet. Away from the D4 zones, backscattered electron micrographs
of the garnets do not show any alteration (Fig. 2.5a). However, close to the marble
shear zones the garnets are highly altered to chlorite pods that preserve the garnet’s
original shape (Fig. 2.5b). Other retrograde reactions are common, including
sericitizion of plagioclase pointing to the activity of fluids under lower greenschist
facies.
Hot cathodoluminescence (CL) was used to obtain qualitative information on the
chemical distribution inside the Schneeberg marble mylonites. Whereas the fine-
grained matrix is characterized by a dull (brown-orange) luminescence, the veins can
be distinguished by a brighter color (yellow-orange) (Fig. 2.4b). The bright color is
due to substitution of the Ca2+ site by Mn2+ (Machel & Burton, 1991; Lewis et al.,
1998; Barbin, 2000) and suggests the presence of externally derived fluids with a
different chemical composition (open system). Crosscutting relationships of the veins
and different degrees of diffusion of the luminescence intensity point to several
generations of fracturing and crystallization (fracture-sealing) during mylonitization.
To study the grain boundary morphology of the recrystallized calcite and to minimize
the influence of possible late-stage fluid infiltration on the grain boundary
44
morphology, the samples were taken in a reasonable distance from the surface (tens of
cm). The sections with a thickness of ~2mm were broken after several cycles of
heating (~220 °C) and cooling (~25 °C). The temperature cycling promoted
intergranular fractures. The samples were sputtered with Au-Pd and observed in SEM.
Most grain boundaries of the Schneeberg mylonites are characterized by isolated,
triangular pores. They differ in size, but similar in shape and orientation, indicating
that they are crystallography controlled (Fig. 2.6a-c). There is also evidence of a
connected network of triple-junction tubes, with the dihedral angles being controlled
by crystallographic orientation of the respective grains (Fig. 2.6c).
Figure 2.4: Syndeformational calcite veins inside the D4 marble mylonites. a) optical
micrograph (transmitted light, crossed nicols). b) cathodoluminescence micrograph showing different generations of calcite veins; the color of the veins is brighter than that of the fine-grained marble mylonite matrix, probably owing to Mn2+substitution and suggesting that the fluids were externally derived.
45
Figure 2.5: Backscattered electron images of garnets in mica schists from the
Schneeberg area (a & b) and from the Naxos high-grade core (c). a) garnet in a mica schist located in distance of the D4 shear zones in the Schneeberg area showing no evidence of alteration to chlorite or any other retrograde reaction of garnet or mica. b) garnet in a mica schist located just next to a D4 marble shear zone in the Schneeberg complex; the garnet’s original shape is still visible, but it is highly altered to chlorite by retrograde reactions due to the involvement of fluids. c) garnet inside mica schist just next to a marble mylonite inside the high-grade core of Naxos; the garnet is not affected by retrograde reactions and its appearance is similar to the garnets sampled in distance of the late-stage shear zones.
46
Figure 2.6: SEM micrographs of broken surfaces of marble mylonites from the
Schneeberg Complex (a-c) and from the high-grade core in Naxos (d-f) showing the grain boundary morphology. a) & b) grain boundaries contain triangular pores controlled by crystallography. c) the pores differ in volume, but their orientation and shape is similar; note also the tubes along triple grain junctions and the dihedral angle. d) In the Naxos rocks, grain boundaries are smoother and contain only a few small pores; note the 3D topography of the heavily thick twinned grain in the lower left corner. e) rarely, triple junctions contain tubular pores. f) in a few cases, isolated, crystallography controlled pores are observed on a grain boundary; suggesting that a small amount of fluids was present in the Naxos mylonites.
47
Chemistry
The chemical composition of the mylonites and their respective host rocks was
analyzed by XRF and ICP-OES to investigate the influence of fluids during shear
zone evolution (Tables 2.2 & 2.3). Additionally EDX analysis on polished and etched
surfaces and roentgen diffractometry on insoluble residue of the dissolved marble
samples was used to gain additional information on the chemistry of those mineral
phases.
Table 2.2: XRF data for some elements of selected samples (values in wt %). Schneeberg Complex Naxos high grade core
rel. accu-
racy [%] N-1b1 N-2h E-1-1 E-1-2 E-4 M-8-1 M-8-3 M-8-4 8a 11a-1 11a-3
Fe2O3 (T) 0.39 0.19 0.12 0.12 0.07 0.14 0.22 0.16 0.12 0.02 0.02 0.03
TiO2 0.03 0.01 0.01 0.02 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01 0.01
Al2O3 0.24 0.01 0.11 0.40 0.12 0.09 0.17 0.12 0.15 0.33 0.06 0.04
MnO 0.02 0.01 0.02 0.01 0.01 0.02 0.17 0.08 0.03 0.01 0.01 0.01
MgO 0.16 0.26 0.45 0.33 0.28 0.28 0.14 0.32 0.56 0.36 0.48 0.44
Na2O 0.08 0.14 0.18 0.18 0.25 0.17 0.18 0.13 0.32 0.29 0.19 0.14
Table 2.3: ICP-OES data for some elements of selected samples (values in ppm). Schneeberg Complex Naxos high grade core
E 8a 11a
h.r. a myl. b myl. h.r. myl. h.r. myl.
E-1-4 E-1-1 E-4 8a1c 8a1a 11a1c 11a1a
Mn 24.0 46.2 125.2 11.5 8.6 6.6 20.4
Fe 320.0 493.0 665.3 22.2 130.5 34.6 40.2
Ni 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.3 0.1 0.7 0.2
Cu 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.3
Zn 0.6 1.5 0.8 0.3 0.4 0.7 1.1
Cr 0.0 0.2 0.0 0.4 0.4 0.2 0.1
Ti 1.0 2.1 1.1 1.6 1.3 1.1 1.0
Mg 1343.5 1087.5 1190.3 1421.8 1209.1 2063.9 1558.4
Sr 96.4 96.1 384.7 66.5 52.1 80.8 69.7
Al 13.5 24.9 26.8 1.6 1.5 15.6 2.2
Si 14.9 20.9 21.3 3.3 2.8 4.2 4.2
Na 28.6 19.9 20.2 10.0 10.4 11.2 17.2
K 7.2 6.2 7.9 2.3 2.0 3.3 5.1
P 9.9 26.9 29.8 24.6 26.9 41.9 24.3
a host rock b mylonite
48
The marble host rock of the Laaser Series is very pure (Tables 2.2 & 2.3). RDA and
EDX analyses indicate muscovite and quartz being second phase minerals. Inside the
shear zones the mylonites are enriched in some elements, especially Mn and Al (Fig.
2.7a). Some of the elements can be attributed to the second phase minerals muscovite,
biotite and chlorite. However the ICP analysis shows that the calcite composition of
the mylonites is commonly enriched in several other elements, including Na, Mg, and
Ti (Fig. 2.7b). Inside the mylonites elements as Mn and Mg are incorporated into the
calcite lattice and are presumably derived from fluids that also promoted the alteration
towards chlorite.
Figure 2.7: Plots of chemical analyses of the selected mylonites normalized to their
respective host rocks derived by a) XRF and b) ICP-OES (circles: Schneeberg Complex; squares: Naxos high-grade core; thick line at one: host rock composition). The Schneeberg mylonites show a larger variation in some elements compared to their respective host rocks, whereas the Naxos mylonites do not show these significant compositional changes.
49
In addition to the chemical composition, the presence of fluids during shear zone
evolution can be detected by measurements of stable isotopes. We selected rock chip
samples of homogeneous marble with different degrees of recrystallization, traversing
from the host rock to center of the mylonite zone. The stable isotopes C13 and O18
were analyzed at the Mineralogical Department of the University Bonn, Germany (R.
Hoffbauer) (Table 2.4) and are displayed in PDB and plotted as a function of the
degree of recrystallization (Fig. 2.8a). Whereas the respective host rock data range
between -12 and -9 ‰ for δ18O and between 0.95 and 1.8 ‰ for δ13C, there is far
greater scatter of values in the recrystallized parts, ranging from -14 to -6 ‰ for δ18O
and from 0.3 to 1.6 ‰ for δ13C. In addition, isotope data derived from a
syndeformational vein that formed inside a mylonite (E-3; with values of δ18O = -
13.69‰ and δ13C = -0.42‰) indicates that the fluids were derived from an external
source.
Figure 2.8: Diagrams of stable isotopes C13 and O18 (both: PDB standard) as cross-
sections from host rock (0% RX) towards mylonite (100% RX) for several shear zones in the Schneeberg Complex (a & b) and the Naxos high-grade core (c & d). The recrystallized parts in the Schneeberg marble shear zones show a large scatter of data for both C13 and O18, whereas, there are only minor changes throughout the profiles in the Naxos marble shear zones. The asterisk represents the vein data inside a Schneeberg marble mylonite (E-3).
50
Table 2.4: Data of the analyses of the stable isotopes C13 and O18 displayed in PDB standard. Sample E-3 represents data of a syndeformational vein.
samples % (Recr.) δ18O [°/°°] δ18O [°/°°] δ13C [°/°°]
(SMOW) (PDB) (PDB)
M-8-1a 100 18.42 -12.98 1.18
M-8-1b 50 18.46 -12.94 1.30
M-8-2a 100 18.53 -12.87 1.39
M-8-2b 50 18.64 -12.76 1.53
M-8-3a 50 18.65 -12.75 1.48
M-8-3b 100 18.66 -12.74 1.45
M-8-3c 50 18.66 -12.74 1.44
M-8-4 5 19.97 -11.47 1.51
M-8-5 0 20.19 -11.26 1.53
E-1-1 100 18.56 -12.84 1.62
E-1-2 50 21.35 -10.13 1.23
E-1-3 10 20.09 -11.36 1.36
E-3 0 (vein) 17.69 -13.69 -0.42
E-4 100 17.64 -13.73 0.34
N-2d1 100 22.51 -9.01 1.67
N-2h 100 20.65 -10.81 1.16
N-2a2a 100 25.08 -6.51 0.63
N-2a2b 50 25.03 -6.56 0.67
N-1a1 0 22.49 -9.03 1.81
N-1b1 0 22.13 -9.37 1.21
Schn
eebe
rg C
ompl
ex
N-1c1 0 19.42 -12.01 0.95
8a1a 100 23.42 -8.12 2.06
8a1b 50 23.38 -8.16 2.06
8a1c 0 23.40 -8.14 2.07
11a1a 100 25.65 -5.96 2.19
11a1b 50 25.80 -5.81 2.09
11a1c 0 26.15 -5.47 2.06 Nax
os h
igh
grad
e co
re
51
To constrain the temperature at which D4-mylonitization took place, calcite-dolomite
solvus geothermometry was applied. According to Matthews et al. (1999) calcite-
dolomite geothermometry can be applied in recrystallized calcite (due to cation
equilibration) even at temperatures below 400 °C. The analyses for Ca and Mg were
made by electron microprobe using (Table 2.5). The temperatures, calculated
according to the equation of Lieberman & Rice (1986) indicate mylonitization
temperatures of 279 ± 25 °C, in agreement with the presence of type III calcite twins,
the existence of twin boundary migration and with the studies of Sölva et al. (in press)
who proposed lower greenschist facies conditions for the D4-Laaser Series-shear zone.
Table 2.5: Microprobe data of several marble mylonites used to calculate the temperature during mylonitization from calcite-dolomite solvus geothermometry (Lieberman & Rice, 1986). The entire data set is available from the authors upon request.
wt% CaO wt% MgO XMgCO3 T [°C] a
sample n b
mean std dev mean std dev mean std dev mean std dev
N-2h 23 55.01 0.4104 0.39 0.1106 0.0083 0.00234 300 24
E-1-1 27 55.55 0.2839 0.25 0.0400 0.0052 0.00084 262 13Schneeberg
E-3 8 54.33 0.3066 0.29 0.0443 0.0062 0.00096 276 13
8a1a 20 55.61 0.3287 0.23 0.0235 0.0049 0.00049 258 8Naxos
11a2 19 54.30 0.3418 0.32 0.0251 0.0068 0.00052 285 6
a calculated according to the equation of Lieberman & Rice (1986) (T[°C] = 3685.7 / (1.6145 - ln XMgCO3) – 273)
b number of measurements
2.3.2 Naxos high-grade core
Mesostructures
Inside the high-grade core of Naxos, the marble rafts are predominantly of calcite
with rare quartz grains. The calcite marble, famous for its purity and white color and
mined since ancient times, is very coarse-grained with grain sizes up to 15 mm due to
peak M2b conditions (~ 700 °C and ~ 0.6 GPa). The marble rafts are intercalated by
pegmatite intrusions and layers of amphibolite and mica schist. Mylonite zones are
restricted to the marble units and are easily detected owing to the striking difference
in grain size and the milky, porcelain-like appearance. The shear zones have a
52
thickness of up to one meter with alternating degrees of recrystallization; the
stretching lineations trend N-S (Urai et al., 1990).
The intercalated layers of mica schist and amphibolite are up to 10 cm thick. Due to
the complex deformation history that includes N-S extension during D2, the layers are
boudinaged and folded with fold axes trending N-S.
The mica schists contain a small number of euhedral garnets. Their grain size is up to
2mm, and they are -reddish-brown, both near to and far from the shear zones.
Microstructures
The marble far from the shear zones is coarse-grained with lobate grain boundaries,
pointing to high-temperature dynamic recrystallization (at peak M2b conditions; Urai
et al., 1990) (Fig. 2.3d). As in the Schneeberg Complex, the Naxos protomylonites are
also characterized by core and mantle structures, indicating subgrain rotation
recrystallization (Fig. 2.3e). In contrast to the Schneeberg samples, the Naxos
protomylonites do not contain intragranular microcracks or shear zones.
Subsequent strain localization is accompanied by complete mylonitization to grain
sizes ranging between 20 to 50 µm (Fig. 2.3c). A final grain size of 25 µm (mean
square root) corresponds to a stress of 48 MPa, using the equation for rotation
recrystallization of Rutter (1995). We did not observe any veins inside the Naxos
mylonites.
Similar to the mica schists of the Laaser Series in the Italian Alps, the intercalated
mica schists inside the marble rafts of the Naxos high-grade core consist of quartz,
mica, feldspar and almandine, but have lower garnet content. Backscattered images of
garnets in mica schists, both far from and near to the shear zones are very similar and
do not show any chloritization (alteration) of the garnets or sericitization of
plagioclase (Fig. 2.5c). Thus, we infer that the mica schists were not affected by late-
stage retrograde metamorphic reactions.
Most grain boundaries of the Naxos mylonites are slightly curved and occasionally
contain pores (Fig. 2.6d). Minor porosity is present at triple junctions, rarely within
triple junction tubes (Fig. 2.6e). Uncommonly, isolated crystallography-controlled
pores are present on the grain boundaries of these samples (Fig. 2.6f) similar in
appearance to those observed in the Schneeberg.
53
Chemistry
As in the Schneeberg marbles, the Naxos high-grade marble is characterized by its
purity (Tables 2.2 & 2.3). RDA and EDX analyses show that quartz and muscovite
together with very rare amounts of feldspar are present as randomly distributed
second phases with contents of less than 0.5 %. The quartz grains are rounded and are
characterized by sizes of commonly 10 µm. The two mylonites are very similar in
chemical composition compared to their host rock (Fig. 2.7a & b). However,
compared to the Schneeberg shear zones, the chemical composition of the Naxos
mylonites deviates only slightly from that in the respective host rock.
We analyzed carbon and oxygen isotopes along cross-sections of two different shear
zones inside the Naxos high-grade core (Table 2.4). The host rock data is about 2.1 ‰
for δ13C and ranges between –8 and –5.5 ‰ for δ18O, the latter being in accordance
with data from Baker & Matthews (1995). The isotopic signature of the recrystallized
mylonites is very similar to the host rock (Fig. 2.8b). Compared to the Schneeberg
mylonites, the Naxos samples show such smaller changes in composition. Applying
the calcite-dolomite solvus geothermometry for the post-M2b mylonites inside the
high-grade core of Naxos indicates temperatures of 271 ± 15 °C (Table 2.5), i.e., close
to those calculated for the Schneeberg mylonites.
2.4 Discussion
The host rocks and the marble mylonites from the two study areas are very similar.
Both of the host formations consist of calcite marbles of high purity, intercalated
between mica schist, and both have an early history of polyphase, high-grade
metamorphism, accompanied by deformation that produced massive, coarse-grained
rocks. Both hosts suffered a second deformation episode that took place during uplift,
and that resulted in localized deformation in shear zones, at temperatures around 270
– 280 °C.
The shear zones in the two study areas are similar, too: strain localization resulted in
progressive recrystallization of the coarse-grained host into a fine-grained marble
mylonite. Intermediate stage protomylonites have core and mantle structure evolving
by a combination of subgrain rotation and grain boundary migration. The
recrystallized grain size of the mylonites is slightly different, indicating higher
54
differential stress in Schneeberg (~100 MPa) than Naxos (~50 MPa). If the two
marbles had the same rheology, the difference in grain size would suggest that strain
rates in Schneeberg were higher, but experiments indicate that there are large
differences in rheology of calcite marbles of only slightly varying composition (e.g.
de Bresser et al., 2002).
The main difference between the two study areas is the fugacity of water in the fluids
present during mylonite formation. The role of CO2 within the pore fluid must not be
neglected, as calcite needs CO2 to be stable. Clearly, detailed knowledge of the fluid
chemistry would contribute to a better understanding of the mass transfer processes
that were active during shear zone evolution. From our present data we propose that
the difference of the presence of fluids, and the fact that most other parameters are
similar, forms the basis for evaluating the role of fluids in calcite shear zones at
temperatures around 270 – 280 °C. A schematic model summarizing the discussion
below is shown in Figure 2.9.
Figure 2.9: Sketches of the microstructures of the marble mylonites recrystallized
under a) wet and b) less wet conditions. The pre-mylonitic structure, sketched in the lower two diagrams, is assumed to be similar in both regimes, except for the amount of fluids present as pores on the grain boundaries. During shear zone evolution, veins, intragranular cracks and dilatant grain boundaries, result from the activity of fluids inside the wet system; features that are absent, or at least much less numerous in the drier (less-wet) system. However, in both systems, any porosity that is present is probably dragged by slow grain boundary migration during mylonitization (indicated by small arrows), resulting in similar grain boundary morphology (as observed in SEM).
55
We infer that the Schneeberg D4 mylonites were formed in the presence of an
abundance of aqueous fluids based on the following: The calcite composition of the
mylonites was altered during shear zone evolution; mica flakes within these rocks
were altered to chlorite; stable isotopes within the mylonites were depleted with
respect to their host rocks; and finally chemical changes were suggested by
cathodoluminescence observations. In addition, syndeformational calcite veins and
the retrograde garnets in adjacent mica schists provide additional evidence for fluids.
A late syndeformational vein in the Schneeberg mylonite has the isotopic signature of
a metamorphic fluid of an external source.
These changes in mineralization, solid-solution impurities, and isotope concentrations
require advective transport by a fluid, combined with local redistribution on the grain
scale. The details of this process are apparently complex: In most mylonite samples
calcite is enriched in e.g. manganese and titanium as shown by ICP data. The
incorporation of Mn into the calcite lattice can occur during recrystallization
(Olgaard, 1985; McCaig et al., 1999). Similar Mn enrichments in marble mylonites,
documented by cathodoluminescence, have led other authors to argue for the presence
of externally derived fluids (Busch & Van der Pluijm, 1995; Badertscher & Burkhard,
2000). Other studies (e.g. Bestmann et al. (2000)) document the formation of mylonite
without pervasive fluid flow.
In contrast to the Schneeberg mylonites, the Naxos mylonites do not show significant
differences with respect to the host rocks neither in bulk chemical composition, nor in
stable isotopes. The Naxos marbles do not contain calcite veins, and the garnets in the
adjacent mica schists were not affected by retrograde reactions. The lack of
differences between host and mylonite suggests that the Naxos mylonites were formed
under much less “wet” conditions than the Schneeberg mylonites.
Because of leakage during uplift (associated with grain boundary cracking owing to
the high thermal expansion anisotropy of calcite) we do not know what the speciation
of the fluid in the grain boundary pores was during recrystallization. Based on the
chemical changes and pore morphology we interpret these to have been fluid-filled.
Such triangular pores have been observed during crack-healing in single-crystal
calcite when water is present (Hickman and Evans, 1987) and on grain boundaries in
Cararra marble annealed with water at 800 °C (see Figure 5e in de Bresser et al.,
56
2005). Such experiments are, of course, done under conditions at which late-stage
fluid infiltration (e.g. rain water) can be excluded.
We now ask the question how the presence of fluids in the Schneeberg D4 shear zones
has influenced microstructural evolution. Multiple generations of dynamically
recrystallized calcite veins indicate that the veins were formed and deformed during
mylonitization, probably by periodic influx of high-pressure fluid with subsequent
precipitation of calcite, as the rocks were exhumed along the Schneeberg Normal
Fault Zone (SNFZ). Therefore, the changes in calcite composition may have been
caused by two processes: 1.) new calcite crystallized from the fluid and then
subsequently recrystallized (see also Kennedy & Logan, 1997; Bardetscher et al.,
2002; Herwegh & Kunze, 2002), or 2.) impurities were incorporated during dynamic
grain boundary migration recrystallization. In fact, recrystallized intragranular
fractures inside the coarse grains point to the combined activity of these processes.
Grain boundaries containing many isolated pores and connected tubes along triple
grain junctions are also apparently associated with recrystallization processes. Under
conditions of low effective pressure, grain boundaries may have dilated and formed
new porosity, some of which may have subsequently been removed by compaction
when the fluid pressure dropped.
In the Naxos mylonites, most of the processes described above are absent. Triple
junction porosity exists, but such porosity is most commonly isolated, that is,
unconnected. The permeability of these mylonites is probably very low. Rare grain
boundaries with many pores may have been associated with local fluid enrichment.
Such pores probably hindered grain boundary migration by Zener drag, particularly if
they were filled with a non-aqueous fluid (Fig. 2.9) (Stüwe, 1978; Olgaard, 1985; Urai
et al., 1986a; Evans et al., 2001; Herwegh & Kunze, 2002; Herwegh & Berger, 2004).
Returning to the Schneeberg mylonites, it is then interesting to note that the presence
of fluids did not have a major effect on grain boundary morphology and
recrystallization behavior. Although the amount of pores on grain boundaries is
different, other morphological characteristics are similar. The recrystallization
mechanisms are similar, too: subgrain rotation recrystallization followed by slow
grain boundary migration. Thus we infer that drag of the grain boundary fluid in pores
occurred in the Schneeberg mylonites as well.
57
2.5 Conclusions
To assess the effect of water-rich fluids on the recrystallization behavior and grain
boundary morphology in natural calcite, we compared marble mylonites from the
Schneeberg Complex in the Italian/Austrian Alps to mylonites from the high-grade
core of Naxos, Greece. Both settings have similar geologic histories, but they differed
in the nature of the fluids present during mylonitization. Both the fluid-rich
(Schneeberg) and fluid-poor (Naxos) marble mylonites have similar grain boundary
microstructures. The microstructural evolution inside the Schneeberg mylonites was
affected by the presence of fluids as shown by (1) the introduction of
syndeformational calcite veins with slightly different chemical composition, (2) the
presence of intragranular cracks inside the protomylonites, (3) evidence for dilatant
grain boundaries and (4) the existence of triple junction tube porosity inside the
mylonites. None of these features are present in the Naxos samples. However, this
presence of fluids apparently did not affect the recrystallization behavior, at least as
can be judged by the microstructure: The dominant recrystallization process of both
types of mylonites was probably subgrain rotation recrystallization followed by slow
grain boundary migration. In addition the grain boundary morphology is roughly
similar, even if the amount of porosity residing on the grain boundaries is different.
Apparently, the fluids did not have a major influence on recrystallization behavior and
grain boundary morphology in calcite, at least for these two marble mylonites.
Such a conclusion is in agreement with deformation experiments of Carrara marble at
high temperature and high strain rates (de Bresser et al., 2005), but is in strong
contrast to inferences concerning the effect of water on recrystallization and grain
boundary migration and morphology in other minerals such as quartz, halite, olivine
or feldspar.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank M. Burkhard and M. Herwegh for the critical and
constructive reviews and comments. We are grateful to R. Hoffbauer for carrying out
the stable isotope measurements. A. Heimann is thanked for his assistance with
sample preparation and analytical work. M. Frongillo, J. Kallinna and U. Wollenberg
are thanked for their help with the SEM. We also thank N. Chatterjee for his essential
assistance with the microprobe and S. Sindern and R. Neef for carrying out the ICP-
58
OES analyses. We acknowledge W. Kraus for preparing thin sections, H. Sölva for
providing an early version of his paper and H. de Bresser for his valuable comments
on the recrystallization of marble. JLU thanks M.I. Spalla for discussions on
Schneeberg geology. OS acknowledges the Prof. Dr. K. Heitfeld Stiftung for the
financial support during his stay at MIT. This project is funded by the Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft (UR 64/4-1). BE gratefully acknowledges funding from NSF
EAR 0309510.
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Chapter 3:
Microstructural evolution and grain boundary structure during static recrystallization in synthetic polycrystals of Sodium Chloride containing saturated brine2
3.0 Abstract
The effects of brine on recrystallization in halite are well known. However, properties
of brine such as morphology, connectivity, diffusivity and the resulting influences on
deformation mechanisms are still a matter of debate. This paper presents a
microstructural study of dense, statically recrystallizing synthetic polycrystalline
halite containing small amounts of brine. We used powders of two different grain size
classes: <10 µm and 200-355 µm. The aggregates were compacted to brine-filled
porosities less than about 2% and annealed at room temperature, without an external
stress field.
Coarse-grained samples undergo recrystallization manifested by the growth of large
(up to 300 µm) strain-free grains into the deformed old grains. The new grains are
frequently euhedral, with mobile grain boundaries moving at rates up to 6 nm/s. Their
mobility is interpreted to be high due to the presence of water. Grain surfaces are
smooth and the width of the water-rich zones is usually below the resolution of the
SEM (less than 50 nm).
2 Schenk, O. & Urai, J.L. 2004. Microstructural evolution and grain boundary structure during static
recrystallization in synthetic polycrystals of Sodium Chloride containing saturated brine. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 146(6), 671-682 (published without Appendix).
64
The evolution of fine-grained samples starts with primary recrystallization and a
reorganization of grain boundaries. After this stage which lasts a few hours, normal
grain growth effectively stops, and no significant increase of grain size is observed
even after several months. Microstructural observations indicate contact healing at the
grain boundaries, with dihedral angles ranging between 20 and 110°. We interpret
these boundaries to be fluid-free, with the brine residing in a network of triple
junction tubes. This system of triple junctions is interconnected and associated with
significant permeability.
While grain growth is inhibited in the fine-grained samples, after a few hours of
annealing exaggerated grain growth is commonly initiated. This is manifested by the
growth of large, euhedral grains replacing the fine-grained matrix. These grains also
grow with low-index facets and their boundaries are also interpreted to be mobile due
to the existence of a water-rich phase.
3.1 Introduction
The presence of brine in halite strongly affects its mechanical and transport properties.
Observations from nature and experiments show that in deforming wet halite solution
transfer creep and dynamic recrystallization are dramatically enhanced, and that fluid
distribution is complex, both during and after deformation. Understanding the fluid
distribution is important for modeling and prediction of processes in a wide range of
geological environments, such as the seasonal movement of salt glaciers (Talbot and
Rogers, 1980; Wenkert, 1979), strain localization in shear zones in salt (Miralles et
al., 2001), and the flow of salt during diapiric movement (Jackson and Talbot, 1986).
There is also interest in applied fields e.g. to predict the behavior of underground
caverns (Fokker et al., 1996) or modeling properties of salt as seals for gas or oil
(Holness and Lewis, 1997; Lewis and Holness, 1996; Peach et al., 2001).
The reason for the complexity in brine distribution is the high solubility and
diffusivity of sodium chloride in water, even at room temperature. Therefore, in
addition to the redistribution of the fluid under stress by viscous flow (with high
viscosities in very thin fluid films (Peach et al., 2001)) during grain boundary sliding
and microcracking, this high solubility and diffusivity may lead to solution and
crystallization processes in grain boundaries, driven by local gradients in chemical
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potential, due to the presence of external stress, dislocations, grain boundaries, solid
solution impurities or other defects.
Two end members of this grain boundary process are pressure solution (Spiers et al.,
1990) and fluid-assisted grain boundary migration (Urai et al., 1986b; Watanabe and
Peach, 2002). Although these two end members are quite different, the process of
dissolution and precipitation is common to both, and several transitional processes can
be envisaged (Urai et al., 1986a). This is further illustrated in Figure 3.1. Here we
consider two crystals A and B, with two marker points a and b, respectively, separated
by a boundary. We describe this bicrystal in a coordinate system of which the origin is
fixed at the boundary, the y-axis is along the boundary and the x-axis is at 90° to the
boundary. We then define Va and Vb as the x-components of velocity of the two
marker points a and b on both crystals. We now plot Va vs Vb. For the case of a
migrating, conservative grain boundary, the velocities will plot on the line Va = Vb,
i.e. both crystals move to the right or left at equal velocity. For pressure solution, the
velocities will plot in the top left quadrant: on the line Va = -Vb both crystals will
dissolve at equal rates. The diagonal in the bottom right quadrant represents a crack-
seal accretion process where the two crystals both move apart and grow at the same
rate (Hilgers et al., 2001; Hilgers and Urai, 2002).
The off-diagonal positions represent general grain boundaries at which dissolution or
accretion rates are unequal on both sides. For the case of grain boundary migration
this means that the motion is non-conservative (involving addition or removal of
material). For the case of pressure solution this means that material on both sides is
not removed at equal rates.
Urai et al. (1986a) proposed briefly the possibility of such general boundaries. Their
importance has become clearer based on the work of de Bresser et al. (2001), who
argued that dynamic recrystallization brings a polycrystal to the transition region
between grain size sensitive and grain size insensitive creep fields, so that grain
boundary migration, dissolution and precipitation processes occur quite naturally
together, all at significant rates. In such a material general grain boundaries should be
the rule rather than exception.
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Figure 3.1: Schematic diagram illustrating the relationship between different
processes in general, non-conservative grain boundaries. See text for detailed description.
The large effect of water on the recrystallization process in sodium chloride is well
documented. Drury and Urai (1990), Peach et al. (2001), Skrotzki and Welch (1983),
Spiers et al. (1990), Urai et al. (1986a), Urai et al. (1986b), Watanabe and Peach
(2002), have shown that between room temperature and 150 ºC wet, polycrystalline,
natural samples deformed in the non-dilatant field recrystallize readily during and
after deformation, and have presented observations which can be interpreted as that
the boundaries contain thin brine films. In comparison, the experiments of Guillopé
and Poirier (1979) and Franssen (1993), with dry sodium chloride showed that grain
boundaries are essentially immobile at temperatures below 400 ºC. A model for the
migration of water-containing boundaries, based on the serial processes of dissolution,
diffusion through the fluid and crystallization was proposed by Urai et al. (1986a) and
Garcia Celma et al. (1988). This model was further expanded by Peach et al. (2001)
and Watanabe and Peach (2002), who also included interface reaction control of the
migration rate into their calculations.
One of the criticisms of the model of fluid films on mobile grain boundaries was
based on the fact that the samples, which recrystallized in an anisotropic stress state,
67
were examined after removal of the stress. This could have led to a redistribution of
the fluid by viscous flow, possibly to evaporation of the fluid, and thus to errors of
interpretation.
Another argument is based on consideration of thermodynamic equilibrium, where at
room temperature and a pressure of 1 bar the contact angle between sodium chloride
and brine is about 70°. This should lead to contact healing (Holness and Lewis, 1997;
Lewis and Holness, 1996; Smith, 1964). If fluid films exist at some stage, it is not
clear how and how long they can be maintained in such a system.
Pressure solution experiments on wet halite (de Meer et al., 2002; Hickman and
Evans, 1991; Martin et al., 1999; Peach, 1991; Schutjens, 1991; Spiers and Schutjens,
1990; Spiers et al., 1990) have shown that this process is dramatically enhanced by
the presence of brine, and that the grain boundaries often have an island-channel
structure at length scales of micrometers. This is quite different to the structures
observed in mobile grain boundaries, where the grain surfaces are smooth (Urai et al.,
1986b). Transitional behavior may have played a role in the experiments of Spiers and
Brzesowsky (1993), who found recrystallization in compaction experiments
dominated by pressure solution at pressures larger than 4 MPa.
Under suitable conditions, contact healing was also shown to occur in pressure
solution experiments (Hickman and Evans, 1991; Visser, 1999). The theoretical basis
of grain contact healing under stress was further presented by Visser (1999), who
considered surface energy terms in addition to stress-related driving forces and
predicted the fields for pressure solution, contact healing and neck growth.
3.2 Aims of this study
The aim of this study was to better understand the effect of small amounts of brine on
the migration of grain boundaries in halite, and to obtain constraints on the properties
of the brine in these grain boundaries.
To avoid redistribution of the fluid by viscous flow after removal of stress, samples
were annealed under atmospheric pressure, without deformation.
3.3 Methods
Wet synthetic polycrystalline halite samples were cold-pressed from powders of
analytical grade NaCl (Roth, Art. 9265.3; NaCl content > 99.9%) or table salt. We
68
compacted wet sodium chloride powder of two different grain size classes (< 10 µm
and 200-355 µm) to dense aggregates with brine-filled porosities less than 2% which
were annealed at room temperature. The microstructural evolution was studied by
scanning electron- and reflected light microscopy of surfaces which were either
polished and etched or broken.
3.3.1 Preparation of powders
Two sets of samples were prepared, differing only in the grain size of the starting
material:
i. Coarse-grained starting material: the grain size of 200-355 µm was obtained by
sieving the as-received NaCl powder.
ii. Fine-grained starting material: dry NaCl powder was ground in a swingmill.
Remaining coarse grains were extracted by Stokes separation: after grinding again
in a saturated NaCl solution in an agate mortar, the slurry was poured into a
column containing saturated NaCl solution, and decanted after the coarse grains
settled on the bottom. The main problem with this method was that the grains in
the powder tended to cluster, preventing full dispersion of the fine grained
fraction. This procedure was repeated for a second time to produce grains of
dominantly 5-10 µm containing rare larger grains of about 15 µm, suspended in
the saturated solution.
3.3.2 Compaction
After treating for 30 seconds in an ultrasonic bath, the salt brine mixture was poured
into a cylindrical die (Fig. 3.2). An O-ring on the lower piston sealed the vessel from
below, while the weight of the upper piston (without O-ring) allowed most of the
brine to slowly drain out on the top. Subsequently the pressure on the upper piston
was raised to 150 MPa in a few minutes, and maintained for 5 minutes. Then the
pressure was removed, and the sample was extracted from the die by removing the
upper piston and pressing the lower piston upwards. The unconsolidated material in
the die had a height of 6-8 mm, producing dense cylindrical samples with a diameter
of 1cm and a height of 2-4 mm. This aspect ratio was chosen to avoid density
differences in the sample due to friction along the die's wall during pressing.
69
Figure 3.2: Schematic diagram of the uniaxial compaction apparatus.
The samples produced had 97.5 ± 0.5% theoretical density, containing a small amount
of saturated brine as a pore fluid. The procedure was developed to minimize the
possibility of introduction of gas bubbles in the samples, so that the pores were brine-
filled.
For comparison, an equivalent set of samples was prepared, with cyclohexane as pore
fluid of a dried (104 ºC for 3 days) coarse-grained powder.
3.3.3 Annealing
To study the evolution of the microstructure in combination with the influence of
fluids, the brine-filled samples were annealed in small, air-tight containers containing
a small amount of saturated NaCl solution, not in contact with the samples. This
ensured that the vapor pressure of H2O around the sample was buffered at the
equilibrium value. The annealing was carried out at room temperature and at 80 ºC, in
this paper we report the results of the experiments at a temperature of 24 ± 1 ºC.
70
3.3.4 Sample preparation for microscopy
The samples, which recrystallize at room temperature, cannot be quenched. When a
sample's outer surface has been prepared for microscopy, the sample may continue
recrystallizing and modifying its structure. This possibility was carefully evaluated by
observing the same surface as a function of time, until we were convinced that the
outer surface of the samples does not change with time.
Many samples showed some efflorescence after removal from the annealing cell
pointing to a network of connected, fluid-filled pores in the sample.
3.3.5 Polished and etched surfaces
The observation of grain boundary structure and grain size distribution was done by
reflected light- and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). Polished and etched thick
sections of the annealed samples were produced by using the method described in
Urai et al. (1987). The sample’s surface was carefully ground and polished. Then the
section was immersed and agitated in slightly undersaturated NaCl solution
(~5.5 molar) for 10 seconds. The solution was removed by rinsing the section with a
powerful jet of cyclohexane. It was quickly dried with a hot air blower and stored
under dry conditions.
3.3.6 Fractured surfaces
For observation of grain surfaces by SEM the samples were broken in tension directly
after removal from the annealing cell and stored under dry conditions.
3.3.7 Grain size measurements
Grain size was measured at different stages of annealing. The size of large grains
formed by primary recrystallization and exaggerated grain growth (see below) was
measured only on grains which were rectangular in the section plane (sectioned
normal to opposite cube faces), whereas the grain size during normal grain growth
was measured using the intercept method (Underwood, 1970).
71
3.4 Results
An overview of the samples described in this paper is given in Table 3.1.
Table 3.1: Overview of samples described in this paper.
sample type of salt starting
grainsize [µm]
annealing
time [d]
storagea
OS-003c table salt >355 2.79 S
OS-003d table salt >355 4.97 S
OS-023c Roth <50 98.18 S
OS-039a Roth <50 0.04 N
OS-039b Roth <50 0.09 N
OS-041a Roth <50 5.83 N
OS-048 Roth <50 O
OS-063c Roth <10 3.99 N
OS-063d Roth <10 33.15 N
OS-065a Roth <10 0.17 N
OS-065b Roth <10 0.90 N
OS-065c Roth <10 7.05 N
OS-065d Roth <10 29.02 N
OS-070a Roth <10 0.01 N
OS-070b Roth <10 0.17 N
OS-070c Roth <10 20.20 N
OS-071a Roth <10 0.80 N
OS-071b Roth <10 4.78 N
OS-072a Roth <10 0.02 N
OS-072b Roth <10 0.05 N
OS-073a Roth <10 0.07 N
OS-073b Roth <10 0.08 N
OS-074a Roth <10 0.11 N
OS-074b Roth <10 0.13 N
OS-075a Roth <10 19.00 N
OS-075b Roth <10 27.00 N
72
OS-085a Roth 200-355 0.02 N
OS-085b Roth 200-355 0.23 N
OS-086a Roth 200-355 1.05 N
OS-086b Roth 200-355 1.34 N
OS-088a Roth 200-355 4.08 N
OS-088b Roth 200-355 6.06 N
OS-089a Roth 200-355 7.98 N
OS-090a Roth 200-355 32.08 N
OS-090b Roth 200-355 39.10 N
OS-091b Roth 200-355 48.24 N
OS-092a Roth 200-355 59.36 N
OS-093a Roth 200-355 53.05 N
OS-096a Roth 200-355 2.15 N
OS-097a Roth 200-355 2.21 N
OS-111a Roth <10 1.17 N
OS-111b Roth <10 4.13 N
OS-114a Roth <10 11.05 N
OS-117a Roth <10 0.67 N
OS-118 Roth <10 O
OS-119a Roth <10 0.01 N
OS-120a Roth <10 0.56 N
OS-121 Roth <50 O
OS-122 Roth <50 O
OS-123 table salt >355 O
OS-124 table salt >355 O
a S: stored in air with silica gel N: stored in air with humidity buffered by saturated NaCl solution
O: dried at 104 °C for 3 days
3.4.1 Water content
The water content of the samples was calculated from the weight loss due to
evaporation by drying. The brine-filled, connected porosity is 2.5 ± 0.5 % for both
fine- and coarse-grained samples.
73
In addition the water content was measured for one annealed, fine-grained sample by
infrared spectroscopy (A. Kronenberg, pers. communication) which indicated
~660ppm H2O. The discrepancy with the higher values found by drying can be
explained by the failure of infrared spectroscopy to detect fluid-filled pores much
larger than 1µm, as these are going to absorb the IR photons at the OH band
wavenumber extremely effectively (Kronenberg, pers. communication).
3.4.2 Comparison with dry samples
It is generally accepted that completely water-free samples of NaCl do not
recrystallize at room temperature. Franssen (1993) and Guillopé and Poirier (1979)
have shown that dry grain boundaries become mobile at temperatures above 450 ºC.
To validate this for our samples, we examined the nominally dry samples with
cyclohexane as pore fluid. Reflected light microscopy of these samples shows an
almost total absence of recrystallization, with a few local occurrences of small new
grains. We interpret these to be the consequence of small fluid inclusions in the
grains, which were not fully removed by the drying procedure. Another method to dry
the NaCl is to melt it, and grind the solidified mass into a fine powder. Samples
prepared by this method, and pressed dry into dense blocks show the total absence of
recrystallization (JLU, unpublished observations).
3.4.3 Microstructural evolution of coarse-grained samples ("primary recrystallization")
The deformation of the initial cube-shaped grains was clearly shown by the irregular
grain shapes, the abundant defect structure and by microcracks initiated at grain
boundaries (Fig. 3.3a). Nucleated in these high-strain zones, new grains start to grow
after a few hours of annealing (Fig. 3.3b & 3c). These grains continue to grow into the
surrounding deformed grains until they meet another recrystallized grain. Usually new
grains are pinned at old grain boundaries, but sometimes they grow across old grain
boundaries (Fig. 3.3c). Most new grains tend to be euhedral, but often the grain edges
are not sharp, and curved grain boundaries also occur.
74
Figure 3.3: Micrographs of coarse-grained samples. See Table 3.1 for a detailed
description of the respective samples (also relevant to all sample micrographs shown in this paper). a) SEM image of a broken surface of sample OS-003d showing microcracks (see arrow) and other damage on grain surfaces pointing to locally high defect density favorable for nucleation of primary recrystallization. b) SEM image of a broken surface of sample OS-003c illustrating primary recrystallized grains. Note the difference of the surface morphology of old and new grains. c) reflected light image of a polished and etched surface of sample OS-012c showing the growth of euhedral new grains
75
during primary recrystallization. Boundaries between two new grains do not show evidence of mobility. Note the abundant defect structure in the deformed old grains.
Figure 3.4 shows the size of these euhedral grains fully enclosed within deformed old
grains, as a function of annealing time. Initially grain boundary migration rates are of
the order of 2-6 nm/s, but with increasing time of annealing the growth rate decreases.
Although the grains are euhedral, it is noted that the grains’ corners are in fact not
sharp (Fig. 3.3c & Fig. 3.5). SEM observations show that these rounded corners
consist of smaller facets which have generally the same orientation as the large faces.
However, also facets with orientations other than 100 were found (Fig. 3.5).
Figure 3.4: Combined diagram of grainsize versus annealing time data for the three
different types of grain boundary migration described in this paper (see text for methods of measurements and Table 3.1 for further details). Note the decrease in growth rate during primary recrystallization, the large scatter of data in secondary recrystallization (exaggerated grain growth) and the essentially zero growth rate in normal grain growth.
76
Figure 3.5: SEM micrographs of a polished and etched surface of sample OS-092a
showing the euhedral growth of primary recrystallizing grains by consuming deformed material. The trace of the grain boundary is covered by efflorescence. The detail (b) illustrates the shape of the ‘rounded’ corners, with ‘stepped’ growth according to the crystallographic system. Efflorescence at the boundary of the recrystallized grain points to existence of fluids.
In cross section, indications of fluids in the boundaries of these primary recrystallized
grains are efflorescence (Fig. 3.5) and grain boundary voids with a thickness of less
than 100nm. Most commonly however, a separation between the two grains (which
could have contained a fluid film) could not be resolved at the limits of resolution of
the SEM. In plane view, some details of the internal structure of the grain boundaries
could be resolved, showing a regular network of slight depressions on the surface of
the grain being consumed (Fig. 3.6).
77
Figure 3.6: SEM micrograph of a broken surface of sample OS-097ab showing a
negative imprint of a recrystallized grain. Note the structured interface of the old grain: the parallel bands are interpreted as etch pit-like structures related to dislocation networks inside the old grain (see also sketch in Fig. 3.12a).
The occurrence of efflorescence on both polished and broken surfaces was commonly
patchy, with some parts showing strong efflorescence and others none at all. This
observation also holds for the fine-grained samples, and its significance will be
discussed further below.
3.4.4 Microstructural evolution of fine-grained samples
“Recrystallization and grain growth”
Compaction of the wet, fine-grained slurry also produces dense aggregates. The grain
size versus time data is shown in Figure 3.4. It can be seen that even for long
annealing times there is no significant grain growth. Closer observation of the
78
microstructure during the first hours of annealing does reveal a reduction of grains
with a visible internal defect structure, a reduction of irregularities in grain
boundaries, and some rearrangement of porosity (Fig. 3.7).
Figure 3.7: Series of SEM micrographs of polished and etched surfaces of the
samples (a) OS-070a, (b) OS-072b, (c) OS-074b, (d) OS-070b, (e) OS-071a and (f) OS-071b illustrating the evolution of grain structure with time. With increasing time the serrated grain boundaries straighten out and defect structure in the grains is reduced. After one hour of annealing a further increase in grain size ceases.
Using the grain size versus time data from primary recrystallization (Fig. 3.4), we
estimate the time required to completely replace deformed grains by primary
recrystallization in these fine-grained samples to be less than 5 hours. Therefore we
infer that primary recrystallization is largely completed after this period, in agreement
with our observations (Fig. 3.8).
79
Figure 3.8: SEM micrographs of a broken surface of sample OS-039b illustrating
primary recrystallization during the first hours of annealing of the fine-grained samples. The large grain in the central part of the image is a deformed old grain being consumed by a defect-free grain with generally low index faces, but also faces different from 100 are found at the recrystallized grain’s corner (b).
Efflorescence in large parts of the sample surface always formed during preparation
of the fine-grained samples (Fig. 3.9), regardless the time of annealing. If the samples
are oven-dried before polishing and etching, the surface structure is similar, but no
efflorescence is formed. However, there were always parts of the surface which
formed no efflorescence. These locations were usually small protrusions on the
broken surface (Fig. 3.9a).
80
Figure 3.9: SEM micrographs of samples OS-041a (a) (broken surface) and OS-114a
(b) (polished and etched surface) showing the effects of efflorescence. In (a) the central part develops no efflorescence: we infer that it is isolated from the fluid-filled network in the sample. b) shows the efflorescence in detail. c) is a sketch illustrating the capillary-driven transport of brine that leads to efflorescence resulting in deposition of larger amounts of halite around grain boundaries emerging at the sample surface.
These areas without efflorescence allow observation of the grain boundary structure in
broken samples. The main feature is the occurrence of angular grains with planar
boundaries. Porosity is located predominantly at triple junctions, and sometimes
between grains. The planar parts of the grain boundaries are smooth, showing only a
few irregularities resolvable at the resolution of SEM, but with a clearly defined rim,
connected with the triple junction porosity. This observation is equivalent to the
clearly defined dihedral angles observed in images showing boundaries in profile.
Dihedral angles are highly variable: they range between ~20 to 110°, associated with
the tendency of many grains to develop rectangular shapes (Fig. 3.10).
81
Figure 3.10: SEM micrographs of efflorescence-free broken surfaces of samples OS-
041a (a) and OS-114a (b,c) illustrating grains with their characteristic smooth planar surfaces, with sometimes minor elevations at the grains’ edges. These structures indicate contact healing. The porosity is predominantly in triple junctions channels. In these figures the grains are thought to have completely healed grain boundaries and grain growth is stopped. Note the tendency of the
82
grains to develop rectangular shapes and also note the broad range of contact angles in (a) (see arrow; small bumps in this section are artifacts).
“Exaggerated grain growth”
In most fine-grained samples exaggerated grain growth was observed. These grains
are much larger than the starting grain size of 10µm and consume the surrounding fine
grains. They are characterized by their rectangular shape (Fig. 3.11). As shown in
Figure 3.4 the size of these grains increases with time of annealing but with a
decreasing growth rate, similar to primary recrystallized grains. These grains mostly
appear in a fine-grained matrix (Fig. 3.11). They are predominantly free of inclusions,
but rarely cigar-shaped inclusions are found inside them.
Figure 3.11: SEM micrograph of a polished and etched surface of sample OS-117a
showing the grain boundary of an exaggerated grain characterized by predominantly straight grain boundaries. Along these boundaries it consumes the fine-sized grains of the matrix.
At low magnification the boundaries of these new grains appear straight, but high
magnification micrographs show that they are irregular at length scales of the small
matrix grains (Fig. 3.11). The grain boundary separating the large new grains from the
matrix is commonly free of pores visible at the resolution of SEM.
83
3.5 Discussion
In agreement with much previous work, these experiments show that the presence of
small amounts of brine has a major effect on grain boundary migration in sodium
chloride. This effect is absent in samples containing a non-polar fluid.
The wet samples have a fluid-filled porosity of 2.5 ± 0.5 % and very few gas bubbles
which were carefully avoided by the preparation procedure. Many pores are relatively
large and form a connected network, in agreement with microstructural observations
and the drying data.
The sample preparation process exposed the pore fluid in the samples to dry air. As
shown by the efflorescence, this resulted in migration of the fluid and crystallization
from the evaporating brine. This effect was surprising, because the results of Lewis
and Holness (1996) report at conditions of 1 bar and 25 °C contact angles at which
porosity should not be connected.
Evaporation of immobile brine from a pore produces a coherently grown sodium
chloride layer with a thickness of 16% of the brine’s volume. Evaporation in
combination with capillary forces and a mobile and connected fluid phase will have a
larger effect: the fluid locally drains towards the surface, where it evaporates,
producing the observed efflorescence structures (see Fig. 3.9). In these locations this
may strongly obscure the original grain boundary structure. On the other hand, this
flow of the brine will also effectively drain the pore fluid from some other areas of the
sample surface. This drainage of brine away from the external surface is interpreted to
be the reason for efflorescence-free regions which can be used to study the details of
the grain boundaries (compare Fig. 3.9a). Therefore we interpret the efflorescence-
free parts of the microstructure to represent the in-situ structure with the brine
removed, with only minor modification due to sample preparation.
3.5.1 Primary Recrystallization
Euhedral primary recrystallized grains are also observed by Skrotzki and Welch
(1983) from extrusion experiments at room temperature, pointing to brine on the grain
boundary probably derived from fluid inclusions inside the deformed matrix. In
experiments and in nature however, curved and euhedral grains are both common.
84
In agreement with extensive literature, we interpret the results of the coarse-grained
samples as follows.
The pressing of the coarse-grained, cube-shaped powders caused deformation of the
grains, which is shown by their deformed shape and internal defect microstructure
containing dislocation networks and microcracks. Annealing at room temperature
does not allow recovery processes inside the deformed grains. The compaction-caused
defect density is highest in the old grain boundary regions, leading to nucleation of
strain-free grains at these sites (Humphreys and Hatherly, 1996). We note that
differences in dislocation density are expected inside the old grains, and thus driving
forces for grain boundary migration will vary. This is in agreement with the scatter in
initial growth rates of the new grains. Primary recrystallization then proceeds in an
isotropic stress field of 1 atmosphere.
The structure of the migrating boundaries could not be observed in detail using the
techniques of this study. Arguments in favor of the interpretation of the existence of
fluid-enriched zones on grain boundaries are (i) the frequent efflorescence from such
boundaries, (ii) euhedral shape of the growing grains, and (iii) the high migration
rates. In agreement with previous work, we interpret the boundaries to continue a
semi-continuous water-enriched zone with a thickness less than about 50 nm. If the
zone was thicker, we would have resolved a separation between the grains in the
SEM. It was somewhat surprising to find so little evidence of thicker migrating fluid
films in these samples, as a normal stress is absent and there is no a priori reason for
initially thicker boundary films to start migrating.
3.5.2 Normal grain growth
The presence of fluids also plays a major role for the fine-grained samples as it
enhances the mobility of the grain boundaries for primary recrystallization of the
deformed grains. In agreement with the rates observed in coarse-grained samples,
primary recrystallization is interpreted to be similar to that in the coarse-grained
samples, but come to completion much more rapidly. Both broken and polished &
etched SEM micrographs show the rearrangement of grains, grain boundaries and
porosity being completed after several hours.
After this time, the grain growth essentially stops. Considerations of the driving force
for grain growth suggest that this is not just a much slower process which might be
85
significant at even longer time scales (Fig. 3.4). We interpret the grain size versus
time data, in combination with the clear contact angles as an indication of a
fundamental change in grain boundary mobility: at conditions of 1 bar and 25 °C neck
growth is initiated and the mobile grain boundaries reorganize into fluid-free
boundaries connecting the network of brine channels in the triple junction network.
This essentially stops grain growth. Under a small external stress field a similar
process was observed by Visser (1999) in fine-grained sodium nitrate.
A final point worth considering is why in our fine-grained samples neck growth in
grain boundaries does not lead to the formation of arrays of fluid inclusions. This can
be explained by the commonly reported characteristic size of such inclusions in
coarse-grained halite (Urai et al., 1986b). This size is almost as large as the grain size
in our samples, so that almost without exception neck growth leads to redistribution of
the fluid into the triple junction network.
The morphologies of grain edges and triple junctions with a broad range of contact
angles (20 to 110°) are interpreted to be caused by the high surface anisotropy of the
initial wet grain boundaries. This leads to a change in the morphologies around the
triple junctions, and local large deviations from the theoretical contact angle based on
isotropic surface energies. This results in a mosaic of small-sized grains with
straightened grain boundaries and with a broad spectrum of contact angles (Fig. 3.10).
Efflorescence still found in samples after annealing for months is evidence for fluid
mobility through this network, in agreement with the wide range of contact angles.
This is in contrast to the observations found by Lewis and Holness (1996) who argued
that at similar conditions (1 bar and ~25 °C) the contact angles are about 70° resulting
in non-permeability of salt rocks.
3.5.3 Exaggerated grain growth
Because of its similarity to primary recrystallization, exaggerated (abnormal or
discontinuous) grain growth is also called secondary recrystallization. This process
requires an already recrystallized structure, in which grain growth is impeded, unless
some grains enjoy some advantages other than size over its neighbors (Humphreys
and Hatherly, 1996). According to these authors such advantages are second phase
particles, texture and surface effects. As for normal grain growth, this process is
86
driven by the reduction in grain boundary energy resulting in grain boundary area
reduction during coarsening (Detert, 1978; Evans et al., 2001).
As for the coarse-grained samples, exaggerated grain growth takes place under static
conditions. Its driving force is the stored energy inside the volume of fine-grained
matrix that is being consumed.
Secondary recrystallization starts after normal grain growth already stopped. The fine-
grained matrix consists of grains all with different orientation resulting in surface
energy variations between the grains (Humphreys and Hatherly, 1996). As the surface
energy of a grain itself is strongly dependent on the surface chemistry, fluids existing
on grain boundaries and in triple junction tubes have also a major effect on the onset
of secondary recrystallization. We interpret the observations as follows: the abnormal
growing grain consumes the neighboring fine-grained matrix and the grain boundary
fluid-rich zone incorporates fluids present in pores. As for primary recrystallization
the fluids are assumed to be distributed uniformly on the mobile grain boundaries, so
that the grain continues its growth into an euhedral shape indicating again the fluid-
dependent anisotropy of surface energies. In ceramics similar processes are well
known: exaggerated grain growth with large faceted grains is explained by anisotropy
of surface energies (Kingery, 1974).
3.5.4 Nature of grain boundary fluid
Although direct observation of the fluid in mobile grain boundaries was not possible
in this study, all our observations led us to the interpretation of their presence. If the
fluid-enriched zone has short range thickness variations, these should be commonly
less than 50 nm. Below this length scale the thickness of the fluid is not resolved.
There is however a clear difference in lateral structure of grain boundaries in primary
recrystallization and exaggerated grain growth, illustrated in Figure 3.12.
87
Figure 3.12: Schematic illustration of the hypothesis of the structure of migrating
brine-filled grain boundaries. a) Primary recrystallization: the strain-free grain consumes the deformed grain indicated by dislocations. Dissolution is interpreted to be favored at etch pit-like structured locations. b) Secondary recrystallization: the exaggerated grain consumes the fine-grained matrix by incorporating the fluids that are residing in a network of triple junction tubes. Similar to (a) these areas are preferred dissolution sites. For both processes, the thickness of the fluid-enriched zones is assumed to be less than 50 nm.
In primary recrystallization the new grain is growing into an old one with a high
dislocation density. Our observations suggest that the primary morphological factor
on the surface of the grain being dissolved is the array of etch pits around the
termination of dislocation arrays on the grain surface. At these sites the rate of
88
dissolution is slightly higher, and in combination with the euhedral new grains this is
proposed to lead to a thickness variation of the grain boundary fluid-rich zone.
In exaggerated grain growth the migrating grain boundaries are permanently
connected to the terminations of fluid-filled triple junction tubes (Fig. 12b). In
between these, there are the dry grain boundaries which are being consumed. We
propose that an etch-pit like structure is also present here, forming a system of fine
channels in the grain boundary which are connecting the triple junction tube
terminations. One possible explanation for the observation that exaggerated-grown
grains are free of inclusions is that the fluid which might be otherwise collected in the
moving grain boundary is removed from the system by flow along the triple junction
tubes.
To get more information on the properties as thickness and morphology of these
brine-filled grain boundaries we are starting direct observations in a cryogenic SEM,
in which the fluids will be frozen before breaking the sample.
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to Andreas Kronenberg for carrying out the infrared spectrometry.
Uwe Wollenberg and Jörg Kallinna provided essential assistance with SEM. This
project was funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (UR 64/4-1).
3.6 References
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de Meer S, Spiers CJ, Peach CJ and Watanabe T (2002) Diffusive properties of fluid-filled grain boundaries measuredelectrically during active pressure solution. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 200:147-157
Detert K (1978) Secondary Recrystallization. In: Haessner F (Ed), Recrystallization of Metallic Materials. Dr. Riederer Verlag GmbH, Stuttgart, pp 97-109
Drury MR and Urai JL (1990) Deformation-related recrystallization processes. Tectonophysics 172:235-253
Evans B, Renner J and Hirth G (2001) A few remarks on the kinetics of static grain growth in rocks. International Journal of Earth Science (Geologische Rundschau) 90:88-103
Fokker PA, Urai JL and Steeneken PV (1996) Production-induced convergence of solution mined caverns in Magnesium salts and associated subsidence, In: Proceedings Int. Conference on Land Subsidence, Den Haag, pp 281-289
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Franssen RCMW (1993) Rheology of Synthetic Rocksalt with Emphasis on the Influence of Deformation History and Geometry on the Flow Behaviour. Geologica Ultraiectina, 113. Universiteit Utrecht, pp 221
Garcia Celma A, Urai JL and Spiers CJ (1988) A laboratory investigation into the interaction of recrystallization and radiation damage effects in polycrystalline salt rocks, Department of Structural and Apllied Geology, Institute of Earth Science, pp 125
Guillopé M and Poirier JP (1979) Dynamic recrystallization during creep of single-crystalline halite: An experimental study. Journal of Geophysical Research 84:5557-5567
Hickman SH and Evans B (1991) Experimental pressure solution in halite; the effect of grain/interphase boundary structure. Journal of the Geological Society of London 148:549-560
Hilgers C, Koehn D, Bons PD and Urai JL (2001) Development of crystal morphology during unitaxial growth in a progressively widening vein; II, Numerical simulations of the evolution of antitaxial fibrous veins. Journal of Structural Geology 23:873-885
Hilgers C and Urai JL (2002) Microstructural observations on natural syntectonic fibrous veins: implications for the growth process. Tectonophysics 352:257-274
Holness M and Lewis S (1997) The structure of the halite-brine interface inferred from pressure and temperature variations of equilibrium dihedral angles in the halite-H2O-CO2 system. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 61:795-804
Humphreys FJ and Hatherly M (1996) Recrystallization and related annealing phenomena. Pergamon, pp 497
Jackson MPA and Talbot CJ (1986) External shapes, strain rates, and dynamics of salt structures. Geological society of america bulletin 97:305-323
Kingery WD (1974) Plausible Concepts Necessary and Sufficient for Interpretation of Ceramic Grain-Boundary Phenomena: II, Solute Segregation, Grain-Boundary Diffusion, and General Discussion. Journal of the American Ceramic Society 57:74-83
Lewis S and Holness M (1996) Equilibrium halite-H2O dihedral angles: High rock-salt permeability in the shallow crust? Geology 24:431-434
Martin B, Roeller K and Stoeckhert B (1999) Low-stress pressure solution experiments on halite single-crystals. Tectonophysics 308:299-310
Miralles L, Sans M, Gali S and Santanach P (2001) 3-D rock salt fabrics in a shear zone (Suria Anticline, South-Pyrenees). Journal of Structural Geology 23:675-691
Peach CJ (1991) Influence of deformation on the fluid transport properties of salt rocks. Geologica Ultraiectina, 77. Universiteit Utrecht, Utrecht, pp 238
Peach CJ, Spiers CJ and Trimby PW (2001) Effect of confining pressure on dilatation, recrystallization, and flow of rock salt at 150°C. Journal of Geophysical Research 106:13,315-13,328
Schutjens P (1991) Intergranular pressure solution in halite aggregates and quartz sands: an experimental investigation. Geologica Ultraiectina, 76. Universiteit Utrecht, pp 233
Skrotzki W and Welch P (1983) Development of texture and microstructure in extruded ionic polycrystalline aggregates. Tectonophysics 99:47-61
Smith CS (1964) Some elementary principles of polycrystalline microstructure. Metallurgical Reviews 9:1-48
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Spiers CJ and Brzesowsky RH (1993) Densification behaviour of wet granular salt: Theory versus experiment, Seventh Symposium on Salt. Elsevier Science Publishers B.V., Amsterdam, pp 83-92
Spiers CJ and Schutjens P (1990) Densification of crystalline aggregates by fluid-phase diffusional creep. In: Meredith PD (Ed), Deformation processes in minerals, ceramics and rocks. Unwin Hyman, pp 334-353
Spiers CJ, Schutjens PMTM, Brzesowsky RH, Peach CJ, Liezenberg JL and Zwart HJ (1990) Experimental determination of constitutive parameters governing creep of rocksalt by pressure solution. In: Rutter EH (Ed), Deformation Mechanisms, Rheology and Tectonics. Geological Society Special Publication, pp 215-227
Talbot CJ and Rogers EA (1980) Seasonal movements in a salt glaciers in Iran. Science 208:395-396
Underwood EE (1970) Quantitative Stereology. Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, pp 274
Urai JL, Means WD and Lister GS (1986a) Dynamic recrystallization of minerals. In: Heard HC (Ed), Mineral and rock deformation; laboratory studies; the Paterson volume. AGU Geophysical Monograph, pp 161-199
Urai JL, Spiers CJ, Peach C, Franssen RCMW and Liezenberg JL (1987) Deformation mechanisms operating in naturally deformed halite rocks as deduced from microstructural investigations. Geologie en Mijnbouw 66:165-176
Urai JL, Spiers CJ, Zwart HJ and Lister GS (1986b) Weakening of rock salt by water during long-term creep. Nature 324:554-557
Visser HJM (1999) Mass transfer processes in crystalline aggregates containing a fluid phase, Geologica Ultraiectina. Universiteit Utrecht, pp 244
Watanabe T and Peach CJ (2002) Electrical impedance measurement of plastically deforming halite rocks at 125°C and 50 MPa. Journal of Geophysical Research 107:ECV 2-1 - 2-12
Wenkert DD (1979) The flow of salt glaciers. Geophysical Research Letters 6:523-525
91
3.7 Appendix3
3.7.1 Application of the data to the models of Visser (1999)
The phenomenon of contact healing was shown to occur in pressure solution
experiments. Hickman & Evans (1991) studied the morphology of grain-to-grain
contacts of two halite crystals in the presence of brine under stress and observed
healing of the contacts as the contact angle between the two salt lenses changed
towards its equilibrium value and the grain boundaries showed no relief at a scale
observable with reflected light interferometry. Visser (1999) conducted uniaxial
densification tests on fine grained sodium nitrate aggregates in the presence of sodium
nitrate saturated solution with volumetric strains of 10-20 %. For high stresses
(> 3 · 104 Pa) and grain sizes > 20 µm she observed a densification behavior that is
consistent with conventional pressure solution models, i.e. that with decreasing grain
size the strain rate increases. However for low stresses (< 3 · 104 Pa) and fine grain
sizes (< 20 µm), the opposite dependence was observed (the strain rates decreased
with decreasing grain size). These observations were attributed to the effect of surface
energy forces that exceed the stress related forces.
The theoretical basis for grain contact healing under stress was further given by Visser
(1999), who considered surface energy terms in addition to stress-related driving
forces and predicted the fields for pressure solution, contact healing and neck growth
(for a detailed description of the models the reader is referred to chapter 1 of this
thesis).
Our experiments on statically recrystallizing synthetic polycrystals of sodium chloride
containing saturated brine are characterized by a similar microstructural behavior.
Inside the coarse grained samples euhedral primary recrystallized grains are observed
that grow into the surrounding deformed matrix, pointing to the presence of fluids on
the grain boundary. However the experiments on the compacted fine grained samples
show that – after completion of primary recrystallization and rearrangement grain
boundaries – normal grain growth stops (see Fig. 3.4).
3 not included in the published article.
92
In the following, we apply our observations of fluid-assisted grain boundary migration
to the criteria Visser presented to describe the competition between the driving forces
for neck growth/contact healing type processes and solution/precipitation creep.
Coarse grained samples
The compaction of the coarse grained samples caused deformation and resulted in
nucleation and growth of strain-free grains. Due to our experimental conditions the
primary recrystallizion proceeded in an isotropic stress field of 1 atmosphere
(≈ 105 Pa). Although during compaction direct measurements of the differential
stresses at the grain scale are not available, these can be inferred to be less than
20MPa based on single crystal experiments on halite (Carter & Hansen, 1983).
Assuming a dislocation density (ρdisl) of 2.5 · 1013 m-2 (= 25 µm-2) corresponding to a
stress (τ) of 12.5 MPa (Kemter & Strunk, 1977), the driving force for grain boundary
migration is 1 · 105 J · m-3 (Urai et al., 1986).
According to Nicolas & Poirier (1976) the internal elastic strain in crystals can be
described:
by the stress field of an edge dislocation:
( )
( )
( )
sin2 1
sin 1
cos2 1
rr
zz
r
G bx
G bx
G bxθ
θσπ ν
θσπ ν
θσπ ν
=−
=−
=−
and by the stress field of a screw dislocation:
13
23
sin2
cos2
Gbx
Gbx
θσπ
θσπ
= −
= +
with σ: stress Pa] G: shear modulus [Pa] b: Burgers vector [m] θ: periodic angle for screw movement around cylinder axis [°] ν: Poisson ratio [-] x: distance from dislocation core [m]
93
For sodium chloride the shear modulus (G) is 14.7 GPa Visser (1999) and the Burgers
vector (b) is 2.8 Ǻ for slip on 110 planes at low temperature (Nicolas & Poirier,
1976). Assuming the Poisson ratio (ν) to be 0.25 with θ ranging between 0 and 90°,
the stress field (σ) of the dislocation is described by:
0.1 2x x
σ< <
Again considering the dislocation density (ρdisl) to be = 25 µm-2, the simplified
approximation of the distance between dislocations is 0.2 µm. Thus for the radius
from the dislocation core (x) = 0.1 µm, the relationship shows that the locked-in
elastic stress of the deformed grains is in the range between 1 and 20 MPa.
The radius of curvature of the euhedral strain-free grains is proposed to be in the order
of meters. If we now assume that the locked-in elastic stress has a similar effect as the
external stress field in the models predicted by Visser (1999), our data can be plotted
into her material transport mechanism maps (Fig. A1). This comparison suggests that
during primary recrystallization contact healing should be prevented by the stress
locked into the deformed grains, without an external stress field and may explain why
fluid-filled grain boundaries do not neck down into fluid inclusion arrays during
primary recrystallization. An additional effect here may be the fact that the growing
grains are euhedral and bound by F-faces with a strong surface anisotropy.
Fine grained samples
Inside the brine-containing fine grained samples (grain size < 10µm) normal grain
growth stopped after primary recrystallization and grain boundary rearrangement were
completed (see Fig. 3.7). This was interpreted to be due to contact healing processes
that lead to the redistribution of fluids from mobile grain boundaries into a connected
network of triple junction tubes leaving behind fluid-free contacts. Let us assume i)
the stress acting at the contacts being around 10 Pa, a very low value due to body
forces in the sample and perhaps some residual stresses, and ii) the radius of curvature
being in the range of 10 µm to 1 mm (compare Fig. 3.7). If we plot the data into the
map of material transport mechanisms (Fig. 3.A1) it falls into the neck growth/contact
healing field.
94
Figure 3.A1: Map of material transport mechanism fields (Visser, 1999) that are
applied to the fluid-assisted recrystallization processes observed in our experiments of coarse and fine grained wet halite samples. Here the Visser criteria are proposed to separate the field of contact healing from that of fluid-assisted grain boundary migration. The plotted data of our experiments show that the primary recrystallization of the coarse grained samples.
This means that surface energy related forces dominate and result in healing of grain-
to-grain contacts (criterion 1) and cessation of normal grain growth. Even under non-
stressed but also non-equilibrium conditions, the existence of surface energy related
forces may result in spreading of solid-solid contacts and finally in sealing of the
boundary (Visser, 1999). The absence of fluid inclusions on the grain boundaries is
interpreted to be due to the fine grain size, so that fluid redistribution leads to
accumulation in triple junctions and triple junction tubes.
3.7.2 References
Carter, N. L. & Hansen, F. D. 1983. Creep of rocksalt. Tectonophysics 92, 275-333. Hickman, S. H. & Evans, B. 1991. Experimental pressure solution in halite; the effect
of grain/interphase boundary structure. Journal of the Geological Society 148, 549-560.
95
Kemter, L. & Strunk, H. I. 1977. Dislocation density in deformed NaCl single crystals determined by transmission electron microscopy. Phys. Stat. Sol. A 40, 385-391.
Nicolas, A. & Poirier, J. P. 1976. Crystalline Plasticity and Solid State Flow in Metamorphic Rocks. John Wiley & Sons, London, 444 pp.
Urai, J. L., Means, W. D. & Lister, G. S. 1986. Dynamic recrystallization of minerals. In: Mineral and rock deformation; laboratory studies; the Paterson volume (edited by Hobbs, B. E. & Heard, H. C.). AGU Geophysical Monograph 36, 161-199.
Visser, H. J. M. 1999. Mass transfer processes in crystalline aggregates containing a fluid phase. PhD thesis, Universiteit Utrecht, 244 pp.
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Chapter 4:
Structure of grain boundaries in wet, synthetic polycrystalline, statically recrystallizing halite – evidence from cryo-SEM observations4
4.0 Abstract It is well known from nature and experiments that the presence of brine strongly
affects the microstructural evolution and the mechanical and transport properties of
halite. Existing interpretations of grain boundary structure in deformed wet salt
samples annealed statically at room temperature were based on indirect evidence from
reflected light microscopy and conventional SEM.
This paper presents direct observations of fluid-filled grain boundaries using the cryo-
scanning electron microscope (cryo-SEM) in which the grain boundary fluids were
frozen before breaking the samples. The rapid cooling transforms the brine into the
phases ice and hydrohalite, which are easily recognized from typical segregation
patterns. We studied samples of wet, synthetic, polycrystalline halite annealed under
static conditions at room temperature. Inside coarse-grained samples thin segregation
patterns were observed at the boundaries of the primary recrystallizing grains. These
point to the existence of fluid films with a thickness in the range of 30 nm, but the
finer scale structure of the fluid remains unknown. Inside fine grained samples the
distribution and reorganization of fluids with annealing time is documented by the
combination of contact healing and successive accumulation of fluids in triple
junction tubes. The contact healing is attributed to the small initial grain size, such
4 Schenk, O., Urai, J.L. & Piazolo, S., submitted. Structure of grain boundaries in wet, synthetic polycrystalline, statically recrystallizing halite – evidence from cryo-SEM observations. Geofluids.
97
that the fluid film necks down by accumulating the fluids into previously existing
triple junctions.
Detailed EBSD measurements of both primary and secondary recrystallized grains
indicate that their growth is euhedral, i.e. that grain growth is controlled by the
anisotropy of grain boundary energy of the growing grain.
4.1 Introduction Recrystallization and grain coarsening are microscale transformations that have major
implications for the texture of rocks (Urai et al., 1986a; Evans et al., 2001). In
minerals such as quartz (Griggs, 1974; Tullis & Yund, 1982; Jaoul et al., 1984;
Kronenberg & Tullis, 1984; Hirth & Tullis, 1992; Post & Tullis, 1998), feldspar
(Tullis et al., 1996; Dimanov et al., 1999), olivine (Mei & Kohlstedt, 2003a, b),
bischofite (Urai, 1983) or carnallite (Urai, 1985) fluids play a significant role on
recrystallization and grain growth.
The effect of fluids on recrystallization in halite was shown by numerous observations
from nature and experiments during both fluid-phase diffusional creep (pressure
solution) (Spiers et al., 1990; Spiers & Schutjens, 1990; Hickman & Evans, 1991;
Schutjens, 1991; Peach, 1991; Martin et al., 1999; de Meer et al., 2002) and fluid-
assisted grain boundary migration (Urai et al, 1986b; Peach et al., 2001; Watanabe &
Peach, 2002; Schenk & Urai, 2004). The structure of the halite grain boundaries
which contain water is still a matter of debate. Firstly for pressure solution three
different models that do not exclude each other have been proposed (den Brok et al.,
2002): i) the thin film model (Rutter, 1976; Hickman & Evans, 1991; Renard &
Ortoleva, 1997), the island-channel model (Lehner, 1990; Spiers & Schutjens, 1990)
and iii) the island-crack model (Gratz, 1991; den Brok, 1998).
In the thin film boundary model the grains are separated by a thin, structured water
film with a thickness of a few nanometers. This film is proposed to transmit the
contact stress and diffusion is the process of the transport of dissolved material.
The island-channel boundary model is based on the assumption that – during pressure
solution – the fluids residing in thin films are squeezed out between the grains
resulting in solid-solid contact (islands) through which the contact stresses are
transmitted and water-filled channels through which the material transport takes place
by diffusion. This microscopically rough island-channel structure is dynamically
stable.
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The island-crack boundary model proposes static islands that are separated by
microfracture-controlled fluid channels. In contrast to the solid-solid contact of the
island-channel model, the islands in this model contain thin films comparable to the
earlier proposed thin film boundary model. Due to the low thickness of these thin
films diffusion through the latter is rate-controlling. However, compared to the thin
film model, the total diffusivity in the island-crack model is increased by the presence
of the microcracks.
Secondly experiments on wet polycrystalline halite deformed at temperatures between
room temperature and 150 °C in the non-dilatant field indicate that the samples
recrystallize readily during and after deformation (Urai et al., 1986a, b; Drury & Urai,
1990; Spiers et al., 1990; Peach et al., 2001; Watanabe & Peach, 2002).
The grain boundaries are interpreted to contain thin fluid films. A method to show the
presence of such brine films in water containing halite samples is the application of
the ether test (Spiers et al., 1986): during evaporation of the ether the fluid film is
disrupted into isolated non-volatile droplets. Urai et al. (1986b) showed fluid films by
SEM observations on deformed water-containing halite samples: 1 month after the
experiment grain boundaries showed smooth surfaces, whereas samples annealed for
one year showed grain boundaries with isolated bubbles. The authors interpreted these
results as evidence for the presence of brine films that shrink into isolated fluid
inclusions after grain boundary migration stopped. Similar observations were shown
by in-situ experiments conducted on wet bischofite, during which water-filled grain
boundaries neck down after grain boundary migration stopped (Urai, 1987).
Additionally, in these experiments some cigar-shaped fluid inclusions were left
behind the migrating grain boundary supporting the hypothesis of the presence of
brine films.
The fluid-filled grain boundaries are interpreted to migrate by i) dissolution of the
deformed grains, ii) diffusion through the brine film and iii) precipitation on the low-
index facets of the recrystallized grains forming smooth grain surfaces, comparable to
the step model of Gleiter (1969). However so far the nature of such fluid films in
migrating boundaries has only be inferred indirectly. One problem was that the
observations were made after removal of the stress, which could have led to a
redistribution of the fluid by viscous flow.
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This was avoided in a recent study in which the microstructural evolution of wet
compacted, statically recrystallizing halite samples with different initial grain sizes
was presented (Schenk & Urai, 2004).
The microstructural evolution and grain size data in Schenk & Urai (2004) are briefly
summarized in Figure 4.1: Inside the coarse grained samples primary recrystallization
occured by euhedral grains that grew into the old deformed grains (Fig. 4.1a). Inside
the fine grained samples primary recrystallization wais followed by normal grain
growth, but stopped after a few hours due to contact healing (Fig. 4.1b), while
exaggerated grain growth (secondary recrystallization) initiated at this stage (Fig.
4.1c).
Figure 4.1: Schematic illustration of the microstructural evolution of wet compacted,
statically recrystallizing halite samples described in Schenk & Urai (2004). The processes and grain size evolution of the samples described in this paper are identical. Note that normal grain growth is inhibited, while growth of primary recrystallized and exaggerated grains continue.
100
Schenk & Urai (2004) interpreted growth of the euhedral primary and secondary
recrystallized grains to be due to the presence of brine films on the grain boundaries.
Nevertheless, the detailed nature of the fluid distribution and its influence on grain
boundary migration was only partly resolved, because fluid is removed during sample
preparation.
In this paper we therefore set out to investigate directly and in detail the nature of the
fluid in grain boundaries during different stages of recrystallization within compacted,
polycrystalline halite samples. To do this we studied samples using the cryo-SEM
which recently has become an important tool in geosciences. Small rock chips are
shock-frozen to a very low temperature (~ –190 °C) and can be used for chemical
characterizations (Timofeeff, 2001; Samson, 2001) and for visualization of the
distribution of fluids in rocks, in particular to investigate qualitatively the fluid-rock
interfaces (Mann, 1994; Durand, 1998; Monma, 1997). In order to characterize the
crystallographic nature of grain boundaries we used detailed Electron Backscatter
Diffraction (EBSD) analysis.
4.2 Methods
4.2.1 Experimental methods
Preparation of compacted samples
The sample preparation is the same as in Schenk & Urai (2004), to which the reader is
referred for a detailed description. Here we summarize the procedure briefly: wet
sodium chloride powder of analytical grade (Roth, Art. 9265.3; NaCl content
> 99.9 %) of two different grain size classes (< 10 µm and 200-355 µm) were
compacted (cold-pressed) uniaxially with a pressure of p = 150 MPa for 5 minutes.
The resulting aggregates have brine-filled porosities less than 2 % together with very
minor occurrences of air-filled pores. The samples were annealed at room temperature
(24 ± 1 °C) over periods up to 9 months in small, air-tight containers with small
amounts of saturated salt solution, not in contact with the samples, except for samples
139 and 141 that were stored in a wet salt mush (see Table 4.1 for a detailed
description of the compacted samples).
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Single crystal – brine setup
To interpret the frozen structure of brine inside the compacted samples, we compared
them with the structure of a thin film of frozen saturated sodium chloride solution
between halite plates. For this an industrial-grown halite single crystal was cleaved
along 100 cleavage facets into two thin wafers, which were bonded capillarily with
a droplet of saturated sodium chloride solution (Roth, Art. 9265.3; NaCl content
> 99.9 %) for 12 hours without applying any external stress. Subsequently, this setup
was inserted into a cryo-SEM holder and frozen at a temperature of T = -90 °C for
5 minutes.
4.2.2 Analytical methods
Preparation for cryo-SEM observations
To study the brine-filled grain boundaries directly, we investigated the synthetic halite
samples in a field emission scanning electron microscope (JSM-6300F, JEOL)
equipped with a dedicated cryo-preparation chamber (CT 1500 HF, Oxford
Instruments) at the Department of Plant Cell Biology, Wageningen University, the
Netherlands. If necessary, the samples were ground to the required thickness of
~1.6 mm very carefully to avoid any damage. Then the sample was placed into the
slot of the cryo-SEM holder and fixed with carbon conductive cement (Leit-C,
Neubauer chemicals). It was secured additionally by tightening carefully the screw of
the holder. Subsequently, the whole assembly (sample with holder) was immersed
into liquid nitrogen (-196 °C). Once frozen, the whole unit was transferred into the
cryo-preparation chamber at a temperature of T = -90 °C and p = 1.3*10-3 Pa (high
vacuum conditions), in which the sample was fractured by a cold knife (-196 °C) in
adequate distance from the tightened holder (see sketch in Figure 4.2a). After
sublimating for ~5 minutes, the sample was sputter coated with 8 nm Platinum and
subsequently transferred into the SEM on the sample holder with a temperature
between –170 and –190 °C. Images were recorded digitally.
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EBSD
Detailed EBSD analysis was conducted on selected samples to investigate the nature
of grain boundaries of primary and secondary recrystallized grains in annealed
samples.
To obtain a high resolution EBSD pattern the samples (thick sections) were
mechanically polished using 1200-, 2400- and 4000 grade carborundum paper,
removing dust at regular intervals with a blast of dry compressed air. To remove
surface damage, the samples were chemically polished in pure analytical grade
methanol for 10 seconds, and then immediately and vigorously rinsed in a jet of
diethyl ether. Finally samples where carbon coated to reduce charge during EBSD
analysis.
Samples were analysed in a field-emission gun (FEG) CamScan X500 SEM at the
University of Liverpool. Full crystallographic orientation data were obtained from
electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) patterns using a 20 kV acceleration voltage
and a beam current of 7 nA. EBSD patterns were auto-indexed using the CHANNEL
5.03 software of HKL Technology. The centre of 5-6 Kikuchi bands was detected
automatically whereby the solid angles calculated from the patterns were compared
with the calculated halite patterns originating from 47 reflectors. Data were obtained
by moving the beam at a fixed step size of 2 µm. The average percentage of EBSD
patterns that could not be indexed ranged between 30 and 35%; most of the un-
indexed analyses were at high angle grain boundaries. The maps were processed to
remove erroneous data in order to provide a more complete reconstruction of the
microstructure (Prior et al., 2002). The accuracy of individual EBSD orientation
measurements is better than 1°. The misorientation angle between grains was
calculated by selecting the minimum misorientation angle and its corresponding axis
from all possible symmetric variants (cf. Wheeler et al., 2001).
We present data in a combination of data displays: (1) maps showing the spatial
distribution of grains and their crystallography in different grayscales and (2) 3D
representation of the crystallographic orientation of individual grains of special
interest.
4.3 Observations The microstructural evolution of both the fine and coarse grained samples is identical
with the observations made in Schenk & Urai (2004). In this study grain boundary
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morphology during recrystallization was studied on broken surfaces of samples
annealed for different periods using the cryo-FESEM.
An overview of the samples described in this paper and the main observations are
given in Table 4.1.
Table 4.1: Overview of samples described in this paper.
sample type of salt starting grainsize annealing time observations
[µm] [d]
1-XXs brine: Roth - 0,50 segregation pattern
085a Roth 200-355 252,23 prim RX
111a Roth <10 180,97 norm GG
138a Roth <10 29,93 exag GG
139a Roth <10 6,70 norm GG
141a Roth <10 1,10 norm GG
146 Roth 200-355 139,98 prim RX
152 Roth 200-355 0,50 prim RX a stored in salt mush
4.3.1 Segregation patterns of frozen brine
Setup with halite single crystals and brine
In order to correctly recognize the former presence of brine at grain boundaries we
compared the segregation pattern of boundaries of a sample in which brine was
enclosed between two single crystal wafers of halite (Fig. 4.2a). Due to the rapid
cooling the saturated brine shock-freezes and is transferred into the phases ice and
hydrohalite (NaCl *2 H2O) (Bodnar, 1993; Roedder, 1984). During sublimation for
5 minutes at –90 °C inside the sample stage the ice crystals evaporate leaving behind
negative imprints now seen as pores (Figs. 4.2b & c). Accordingly, if such pores are
observed in our samples, we suggest that they point directly to the presence of brine.
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Figure 4.2: Cryo-SEM micrographs of the single crystal – brine setup. a) Two thin
wafers of halite single crystals (XX-1 and XX-2) were attached to each other parallel to the 100 facets with a droplet of saturated brine and broken with a cold knife inside the cryo-chamber. b) & c) show details of the segregation pattern of the frozen brine film with the phases hydrohalite and ice, the latter as negative imprint due to evaporation during sublimation.
105
General comparison of segregation patterns observed in
experimental samples
Brine inclusions are common in halite, and observed in a coarse-grained sample inside
an old, deformed grain (Fig. 4.3). This frozen, cubic-shaped fluid inclusion is
characterized by the typical segregation pattern, similar to those found in the single
crystal-brine setup, indicating that it represents frozen salt solution, i.e. with the
phases hydrohalite and (evaporated) ice. Inside both the coarse- and fine-grained
samples similar patterns were observed in pores, triple junction tubes and on grain
boundaries demonstrating that those patterns are also the result of brine in frozen
state. Thus, these patterns provide direct evidence on the distribution of brine inside
the compacted samples.
Figure 4.3: Cryo-SEM micrographs of a coarse deformed grain in sample 152 with a
frozen, cubic-shaped fluid inclusion. The segregation pattern is similar to that of the saturated brine in the setup shown in Figure 4.2. See Table 4.1 for a detailed description of the sample (also relevant to all sample micrographs shown in this paper).
106
The volume increase that is due to the transition of saturated brine into the phases
hydrohalite and ice might result in misinterpretations of the microstructure as the
previously brine-filled grain boundaries or triple junctions expand. However, Figure
4.3.b shows that the shock-freezing did not result in microstructural changes such that
the surrounding grain is fractured. Furthermore this micrograph illustrates that the size
of the evaporated ice is 5 times smaller than in the single crystal-brine setup (Fig.
4.2). This suggests that the size of the segregated components is related to the volume
of the fluid.
4.3.2 Microstructural evolution of wet grain boundaries in coarse-grained samples during primary recrystallization
Inside the coarse-grained aggregates (initial grain size: 200-355 µm) primary
recrystallization is the dominant process. Nucleation of primary recrystallized grains
occurs in high-strain zones close to the contact regions of old deformed grains. After
nucleation, these new grains are characterized by a cubic shape and grow into the
surrounding deformed material. This microstructural evolution is documented by the
samples that annealed 0.5 days, 4.5 and 8.5 months (samples 152, 146 and 085a,
respectively (see Table 4.1)). Segregation patterns of the frozen fluids indicate that in
all samples brine was present.
If two or more recrystallized, i.e. strain-free grains with a grain size smaller than ~20
µm are in contact to each other, the frozen brine is only present in triple junctions
(Fig. 4.4).
Grain boundary migration continues if a strain-free grain is in contact with a deformed
grain: Inside sample 146 (annealed for 4.5 months) some of these grains are larger
than 100 µm (Fig. 4.5). This contact zone between the new, recrystallized and the old,
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deformed grain is characterized by a very thin segregation pattern and has a thickness
of less than 30 nm (Fig. 4.5c). Additionally some remnants of frozen fluids are visible
on the lower crystal face of the deformed crystals (see arrow in Fig. 4.5c).
Figure 4.4: Cryo-SEM micrographs of sample 152. At the contact of the two old,
deformed coarse grains new, recrystallized and cubic-shaped grains start to grow. Segregation pattern in a triple junction points to the presence of fluids.
Backscatter analysis indicates that there are no measurable differences in chemistry
between the deformed, the recrystallized grain and the solid phase of the segregation
pattern (cf. Heard & Ryerson, 1986), suggesting that second phases other than brine
did not influence this contact region. Inside the same sample, a different but rare
situation is displayed in Figure 4.6: Here, the porosity is predominantly air-filled, as
shown by the lack of segregation pattern. However, remnants of a frozen fluid phase
are observed at the contact zone of a recrystallized and a deformed grain. The
thickness is ~ 200 nm (Figs. 4.6b & c) with a segregation pattern being very similar to
that shown in the grain boundary region of Figure 4.5c.
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Figure 4.5: Cryo-SEM micrographs of sample 146 showing thin segregation pattern
between the primary recrystallized and the deformed grain. This pattern (arrow in c)) is interpreted to represent a frozen fluid film with a thickness of less than 30 nm. Note that the deformed grain is characterized by complex cleavage pattern when compared to defect-free grain.
109
Figure 4.6: Cryo-SEM micrographs of sample 146 showing a primary recrystallizing
grain growing into an old, deformed grain. The arrow in c) points to the remnants of a frozen fluid film at the contact region. Note that this is a rare region in which porosity is predominantly air-filled.
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4.3.3 Microstructural evolution of brine characteristics within fine-grained samples – Primary recrystallization, normal grain growth and exaggerated grain growth
The evolution inside the fine-grained samples (initial grain size: < 10 µm) starts with
primary recrystallization followed by a reduction of irregularities in grain boundaries
and rearrangement of porosity, that stops after only a few hours. There is no sign of
significant normal grain growth; however at this stage exaggerated grain growth takes
place in some samples.
Fluids are present in all the fine-grained samples whether they were stored in brine
saturated environment or salt mush regardless the annealing time of 1 day, 1 week, 1
month or 6 months (samples 141, 139, 138a and 111a, respectively) (see Table 4.1 for
the detailed sample description).
During the first days, the fluids – indicated by the typical segregation pattern – are
present on irregular and sometimes curved grain boundaries with a thickness of less
than 150 nm, but predominantly in triple junctions (Fig. 4.7).
After one week of annealing at room temperature the microstructure is characterized
by solid-solid contacts. (Fig. 4.8; see solid arrow). The triple junctions remain
irregular because of the lattice-dependent (euhedral) growth of the crystals into the
porosity (Fig. 4.8; see dashed arrow) with dihedral angles varying over a broad range.
An isolated brine-filled inclusion (250 * 50 nm) (Fig. 4.9) is interpreted to represent a
leftover-inclusion. However, this might also be explained by the presence of a fluid-
filled pore resting on the grain boundary.
111
Figure 4.7: Cryo-SEM micrographs of sample 141 showing that fluids are present in
triple junctions and in grain boundaries in the early stages of annealing. Close to large pores the grains grow normal to the 100 facets; however, at grain-grain contacts the grain boundaries are irregular and curved. The detail in b) is interpreted to represent the first step of contact healing (arrow).
112
Figure 4.8: Cryo-SEM micrograph of sample 139 with the typical segregation pattern
of brine-filled poristy. The fine-sized grains grow with low-index facets into the fluid-filled pore (dashed arrow). Note the high diversity of dihedral angles. The solid arrow points to a immobile solid-solid contact region of two recrystallized grains.
Figure 4.9: Cryo-SEM micrograph of sample 139. Some grain boundaries are fluid-
filled, irregular and curved, while others are already healed. The arrow points to fluid inclusion that was probably left behind during grain boundary migration.
The microstructure of sample 111a (annealed for 6 months) is characterized by
predominantly straightened grain boundaries without interactions of fluids and an
interconnected porosity with fluids present only along triple junctions and in triple
junction tubes (Fig. 4.10).
113
Figure 4.10: Cryo-SEM micrograph of sample 111a showing that after months of
annealing the microstructure is reorganized with commonly straightened, fluid-free grain boundaries (solid arrow) and fluids still present in triple junctions (dashed arrow).
Exaggerated grain growth is common inside these fine grained samples as shown by
reflected light microscopy and SEM (see EBSD pattern of sample 138a (annealed for
1 month; see Fig. 4.12). However, cryo-SEM did not allow detailed observations on
the contact of exaggerated grains with the fine grained matrix, probably due to the
plucking-out of the large grains during the low-temperature preparation.
4.3.4 Crystallographic nature of grain boundaries of primary and secondary recrystallized grains
After an annealing period of 8 months in a brine saturated humid environment we
observe in the coarse grained sample 085a (initial grain size: 200-355 µm) several
large euhedral grains. They show little to no lattice distortion within the individual
grain and a dominance of boundaries that form traces to 100 facets (Fig. 4.11). The
misorientation angle between the facetted boundaries of the primary recrystallized
grains and surrounding grains is always > 15º.
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Figure 4.11: SEM and EBSD micrographs of the coarse-grained sample 085a
showing that (primary) recrystallizing grains grow with low-index facets (euhedral growth) into the old, deformed grain; a) shows the so-called band contrast as analysed by the EBSD technique. Dark areas are commonly deformed areas while light grey signifies undeformed grains. b) results from EBSD analysis depicting recrystallized grains with little internal lattice distortion (light grey in a)) and dominance of grain boundaries that are compatible with 100 facets. Insets show 3D representation of the crystallography of the repective grain.
Similar features are observed in the samples exhibiting exaggerated grain growth. We
investigated the crystallographic nature of the boundaries of such grains in the sample
138a (see Table 4.1 for experimental details). In this sample, most of the grains are
115
still very fine grained ( < 10 µm), only few significantly larger grains of up to 300 µm
are observed. The straight boundaries of these grains already described in the SEM
backscatter analysis are characterized by crystal orientation which are compatible
with 100 facets (Fig. 4.12).
Figure 4.12: SEM and EBSD micrographs of fine-grained sample 138a indicating
that exaggerated grown grains are in fact euhedral, i.e. that its growth is lattice-dependent. a) band contrast analysis showing exaggerated grains several orders of magnitude larger than the matrix grains. The fine grained matrix appears dark due to the abundance of grain boundaries which appear dark in a band contrast analysis image. Note the insets representing the crystallographic nature of the individiual exaggerated grains. These show that the boundaries of the exaggerated grains are 100 facets; b) same area as shown in a) this time showing grains in different grey shades.
116
4.4 Discussion Our cryo-SEM observations of segregation patterns along grain boundaries and triple
junctions show that small amounts of fluids are present in the majority of mobile grain
boundaries and in larger pores. In the cryo-SEM, these boundaries have a resolvable
structure which does not indicate a fluid film thicker than 30 nm. The small-scale
structure seen in Figure 4.5c, however, can be interpreted in two ways: it can be an
island-channel structure or a segregation pattern in a continuous fluid film. Thus,
although there is clear evidence of fluids in these mobile boundaries, we cannot obtain
conclusive information on the nano-scale structure from our observations (Fig. 4.13)
due to the unknown morphology of the segregation pattern in very thin frozen brine
films and to the limited resolution of the SEM for structures smaller than a few
nanometers.
The euhedral shape of the recrystallized grains is related to such fluid-filled grain
boundaries (Fig. 4.5c). The recrystallized grain’s surface is inferred to be an F-facet,
however if the fluid-filled grain boundary is a semi continuous fluid film (Fig. 4.13b)
or has an island-channel structure (Fig. 4.13c) remains unclear.
The presence of fluids in grain boundaries agrees with previous observations on
mobile grain boundaries in wet halite (Drury & Urai, 1990; Urai et al., 1986a, b;
Peach et al., 2001; Watanabe & Peach, 2002; Schenk & Urai, 2004), whereas
experiments on dry sodium chloride show that the grain boundaries are immobile
below temperatures of 400 °C (Guillopé & Poirier, 1979; Franssen, 1993). The fact
that recrystallized grains are characterized by an euhedral shape with a clear
crystallographic relationship in terms of facets (Figs. 4.5, 4.11 & 4.12) is in agreement
with observations of similar microstructures in other fluid-containing, recrystallizing
materials.
Such a preferred growth of primary or secondary recrystallized grains is interpreted to
be either i) a result from the high surface energy anisotropy of the wetted NaCl grain
boundaries or ii) a growth mechanism similar to that seen in crystal-melt systems
where ledge mechanism leads to the euhedral shape according to the step model of
Gleiter (1969) or iii) a combination of i) and ii).
117
Figure 4.13: Schematic illustration of mobile, fluid-filled grain boundaries as shown
by segregation pattern from cryo-SEM observations (a). The arrows indicate the euhedral growth of the primary recrystallizing grain (white) into the deformed grain. The true nature of these boundaries in terms of a semi-continuous fluid film (b) or an island-channel structure (c) cannot be resolved with the cryo-SEM.
High surface energy anisotropies are expected to play a major role in fully wetted
grain boundaries. Observations in olivine-ultramafic melt systems showed that
completely wetted grain boundaries are often found parallel to low-index facets
118
((010), (110) and (021)) (Jung and Waff, 1998). These are similar to our observations
of growing primary recrystallizing and exaggerated grains normal to the 100 faces.
However, Walte et al. (2003) questioned the importance of such effects of surface
energy anisotropy. They showed that completely wetted grain boundaries can simply
form by consumption of small grains during fluid-enhanced static recrystallization,
and they concluded that there is no need to relate the structures to surface energy
anisotropy, even though this might enhance the effect.
Another possibility for euhedral shape of the observed primary and secondary
recrystallized grains is the ledge jump grain boundary migration mechanism described
by Gleiter (1969). The assumption of a fluid-filled grain boundary with two solid-
fluid interfaces and a fluid layer in between is similar in terms of the sharp transition
of crystal lattice and adjacent grain boundary and the influence of the orientation of
the crystal on the migration rate. According to the step model the motion of the grain
boundary in the presence of a driving force proceeds by i) dissolution of ions from
favored sites (steps) of the shrinking old grain and from deformation-related
dislocations that reach the surface, ii) diffusion through the fluid layer and iii) re-
attachment at preferential steps of the growing strain-free grain. The euhedral shape
suggests that diffusion is not restricted to the shortest distance. However, the fluid
layer regulates (balances) the transport of ions, such that they are precipitated at
favored steps to preserve the character of the 100 facet.
Inside the coarse grained samples grain boundary migration stops if two or more
recrystallized grains get in contact to each other. As there is no difference in
dislocation density, a significant driving force is lacking. Only the grain boundary
(surface) energy can drive further grain boundary migration. In this situation, the
grain boundary fluid is accumulated along triple junction tubes leaving behind healed,
brine-free grain boundaries. These immobile solid-solid contacts could have
developed by boundary annealing, i.e. the surface energy driven attraction of grain
boundary fluids into the triple junction network, a process that is controlled by the
contact angle.
The cessation of normal grain growth inside the fine grained samples is also
interpreted to be caused by such boundary healing: below a critical grain size the
fluid-filled grain boundary contracts and accumulates in the triple junction network
(Visser, 1999).
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4.5 Conclusions
• Cryo-SEM observations offer direct evidence of fluid-filled grain boundaries
in statically recrystallizing wet, polycrystalline sodium chloride samples. The
frozen fluid phase is represented by the segregation pattern composed of the
phases hydrohalite and evaporated ice.
• The thickness of such migrating brine-filled grain boundaries is usually less
than 30 nm. Finer scale structure is obscured by resolution of SEM and
segregation of brine during freezing.
• Primary recrystallized and exaggerated grown grains exhibit euhedral shapes
with 100 facets. We interpret this type of growth as a consequence of either
significant anisotropic grain boundary energy and/or a solid-melt/brine type
growth mechanism with a ledge jump mechanism.
• The results are in agreement with a model of brine-filled grain boundaries
during primary recrystallization and exaggerated grain growth, and healed
grain boundaries in normal grain growth.
Acknowledgements
We are grateful to A. van der Aelst (Department of Plant Cell Biology of Wageningen
University, The Netherlands) for his valuable assistance with the cryo-FESEM.
The comments on the phase conditions of the NaCl-H2O-system at low temperature
by R. Bodnar are greatly appreciated and H. Siemes is thanked for providing the NaCl
single crystals. This project is funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (UR
64/4-1). SP acknowledges financial support by Marie Curie Fellowship HPMF-CT-
2001-01457, NERC grant NER/A/S/2001/01181 and HEFCE through the grant
JR98LIPR.
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den Brok, S. W. J. 1998. Effect of microcracking on pressure-solution strain rate; the Gratz grain-boundary model. Geology 26(10), 915-918.
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Durand, C. & Rosenberg, E. 1998. Fluid distribution in kaolinite- or illite-bearing cores: cryo-SEM observations versus bulk measurements. Journal of Petroleum Science and Engineering 19(1-2), 65-72.
Evans, B., Renner, J. & Hirth, G. 2001. A few remarks on the kinetics of static grain growth in rocks. International Journal of Earth Science (Geologische Rundschau) 90, 88-103.
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Gleiter, H. 1969. The mechanism of grain boundary migration. Acta Metallurgica 17(5), 565-573.
Gratz, A. J. 1991. Solution-transfer compaction of quartzites; progress toward a rate law. Geology 19(9), 901-904.
Griggs, D. 1974. A model of hydrolytic weakening in quartz. Journal of Geophysical Research 79(11), 1653-1661.
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Mei, S. & Kohlstedt, D. L. 2000a. Influence of water on plastic deformation of olivine aggregates 1. Diffusion creep regime. Journal of Geophysical Research, B, Solid Earth and Planets 105(9), 21,457-21,469.
Mei, S. & Kohlstedt, D. L. 2000b. Influence of water on plastic deformation of olivine aggregates 2. Dislocation creep regime. Journal of Geophysical Research, B, Solid Earth and Planets 105(9), 21,471-21,481.
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Peach, C. J. 1991. Influence of deformation on the fluid transport properties of salt rocks. PhD thesis. Universiteit Utrecht, 238p.
Peach, C. J., Spiers, C. J. & Trimby, P. W. 2001. Effect of confining pressure on dilatation, recrystallization, and flow of rock salt at 150°C. Journal of Geophysical Research 106(B7), 13,315-13,328.
Post, A. & Tullis, J. 1998. The rate of water penetration in experimentally deformed quartzite: implications for hydrolytic weakening. Tectonophysics 295(1-2), 117-137.
Prior, D. J., Wheeler, J., Peruzzo, L., Spiess, R. & Storey, C. 2002. Some garnet microstructures: an illustration of the potential of orientation maps and misorientation analysis in microstructural studies. Journal of Structural Geology 24(6-7), 999-1011.
Renard, F. & Ortoleva, P. 1997. Water films at grain-grain contacts: Debye-Huckel, osmotic model of stress, salinity, and mineralogy dependence. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 61(10), 1963-1970.
Roedder, E. 1984. The fluids in salt. American Mineralogist 69(5-6), 413-439. Rutter, E. H. 1976. The kinetics of rock deformation by pressure solution.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London A 283, 203-219. Samson, I. M. & Walker, R. T. 2000. Cryogenic Raman spectroscopic studies in the
system NaCl-CaCl2-H2O and implications for low-temperature phase behavior in aqueous fluid inclusions. Canadian Mineralogist 38, 35-43.
Schenk, O. & Urai, J. L. 2004. Microstructural evolution and grain boundary structure during static recrystallization in synthetic polycrystals of Sodium Chloride containing saturated brine. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 146(6), 671-682.
Schutjens, P. 1991. Intergranular pressure solution in halite aggregates and quartz sands: an experimental investigation. PhD thesis. Universiteit Utrecht, 233p.
Spiers, C. J., Urai, J., Lister, G. S., Boland, J. N. & Zwart, H. J. 1986. The influence of fluid-rock interaction on the rheology of salt rock and on ionic transport in the salt. University of Utrecht, 132p.
Spiers, C. J. & Schutjens, P. 1990. Densification of crystalline aggregates by fluid-phase diffusional creep. In: Deformation processes in minerals, ceramics and rocks (edited by Barber, D. J. & Meredith, P. D.). Unwin Hyman, 334-353.
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Spiers, C. J., Schutjens, P. M. T. M., Brzesowsky, R. H., Peach, C. J., Liezenberg, J. L. & Zwart, H. J. 1990. Experimental determination of constitutive parameters governing creep of rocksalt by pressure solution. In: Deformation mechanisms, rheology and tectonics (edited by Knipe, R. J. & Rutter, E. H.). Geological Society Special Publications 54. Geological Society of London, United Kingdom, 215-227.
Timofeeff, M. N., Lowenstein, T. K., Brennan, S. T., Demicco, R. V., Zimmermann, H., Horita, J. & von Borstel, L. E. 2001. Evaluating seawater chemistry from fluid inclusions in halite: examples from modern marine and nonmarine environments. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 65(14), 2293-2300.
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Tullis, J., Yund, R. A. & Farver, J. 1996. Deformation-enhanced fluid distribution in feldspar aggregates and implications for ductile shear zones. Geology 24(1), 63-66.
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Urai, J. L. 1985. Water-enhanced dynamic recrystallization and solution transfer in experimentally deformed carnallite. Tectonophysics 120(3-4), 285-317.
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Chapter 5:
The migration of fluid-filled grain boundaries in recrystallizing synthetic bischofite – first results of in-situ HPHT deformation experiments in transmitted light5
5.0 Abstract The effect of fluids on the recrystallization behavior is well known, however their
detailed microscale distribution in grain boundaries and influence on grain boundary
migration is still unresolved. In this study we therefore carried out in-situ deformation
experiments in transmitted light microscopy as they allow continuous and direct
observation of the whole range of processes involved in fluid assisted grain boundary
migration. A new see-through deformation apparatus was developed enabling the
control of the fluid pressure.
We deformed bischofite containing small amounts of aqueous fluid at temperatures
between 50 and 90 °C, with the fluid pressure being 0.5 to 1 MPa. The strain rates
ranged from 5 · 10-6 to 1 · 10-4 s-1. The rates of grain boundary migration were
measured and assigned to the different temperatures and strain rates.
Detailed observations during and after deformation illustrate the evolution of the
migrating fluid-filled grain boundaries and show that the incorporation of fluids from
inclusions as well as their pinch-off is dependent on the grain boundary velocity, the
thickness of the grain boundary and the size and shape of the inclusions. We present
5 Schenk, O. & Urai, J.L., submitted. The migration of fluid-filled grain boundaries in recrystallizing synthetic bischofite – first results of in-situ HPHT deformation experiments in transmitted light. Journal of Metamorphic Geology.
124
direct evidence of the contraction of the grain boundary fluids into isolated inclusions
equilibrium conditions are attained.
5.1 Introduction Deformation experiments in transmitted light have been used in glaciology since the
late nineteen fifties by deforming ice. This technique was further used in geosciences
to get detailed insight into the complex dynamics of the microstructural evolution
during creep (Means, 1989 and references therein) and is now a well established and
useful tool in structural geology.
As most rock-forming minerals can not be studied in the ductile regime at laboratory
conditions with this experimental setup, materials such as magnesium (e.g. Burrows et
al., 1979), (nor-) camphor (e.g. Urai et al., 1980, 1981; Herwegh et al., 1997; Bauer et
al., 2000), sodium chlorate (e.g. den Brok et al., 1998) or octachloropropane (OCP)
(e.g. Jessell, 1986; Ree, 1994; Ree & Park, 1997) are used as analogue for quartz, or
sodium nitrate for calcite (e.g. Tungatt & Humphreys, 1981, 1984).
Some ionic salts as bischofite or carnallite are also suitable for the see-through
experiments (Urai, 1987) as they are transparent, optically anisotropic and as they
deform in the ductile regime at conditions of T < 300 °C and p < tens of MPa.
In this study we focus on in-situ observations of migrating grain boundaries that are
filled with saturated solution as the micro-scale distribution of fluids strongly affects
the transport and mechanical properties of rocks. In ionic salts the effect of fluids on
recrystallization was shown by observations from nature and experiments during both
solution transfer creep (e.g. Spiers et al. 1990; Hickman & Evans, 1991) and fluid
assisted grain boundary migration (e.g. Urai et al. 1986a, b; Peach et al., 2001).
However the structure of the fluid-filled grain boundaries is still under debate. For
pressure solution one model favors the presence of a non-mobile thin, structured fluid
film separating two grains (Rutter, 1976; Hickman & Evans, 1991), through which the
dissolved material is proposed to diffuse.
Experiments on wet halite in the non-dilatant field between 25 °C and 150 °C show
that grain boundary mobility is strongly enhanced (e.g. Urai et al., 1986b; Watanabe
& Peach, 2002; Schenk & Urai, 2004). This again is an indication for grain
boundaries to be filled with fluids, as diffusion through a fluid phase is dramatically
higher than in solid-solid contacts. The migration of such fluid-filled grain boundary
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is interpreted as a process of i) dissolution of the deformed grains, ii) diffusion
through the brine film and iii) precipitation on recrystallized grains.
Urai et al. (1986b) deformed natural halite in the presence of brine: a sample broken
one month after deformation showed smooth grain boundaries, whereas a sample
observed after one year was characterized by isolated fluid inclusions on its grain
boundaries. This was interpreted as evidence for necking down of the fluid film into
its equilibrium configuration after grain boundary migration has stopped.
A method that offers direct evidence of fluid-filled grain boundaries is the application
of the cryo-SEM (Schenk et al., submitted): statically recrystallizing wet,
polycrystalline sodium chloride samples were shock frozen and observed at
temperatures of -194 °C; the migrating grain boundaries are characterized by the
segregation patterns that represent the frozen fluid phase, composed of the phases
hydrohalite and evaporated ice.
In a recent paper on in-situ experiments under transmitted light, Walte et al., (2003)
used the system norcamphor + ethanol to study the development of solid-liquid
systems. The experiments show that disequilibrium features such as completely
wetted grain boundaries and large melt patches can form during fluid-enhanced static
recrystallization when small grains are consumed. Although these features have the
tendency to evolve back toward equilibrium geometry, continuous static grain
coarsening results in the omnipresence of fully wetted grain boundaries and large melt
patches.
This study builds on the in-situ experiments of Urai (1987) on bischofite containing
saturated aqueous solution in order to obtain a fundamental understanding of the
processes that control the fluid geometry during grain boundary migration. We
critically examine the microstructural evolution during recrystallization with a special
focus on migrating fluid-filled grain boundaries up to their break-up into arrays of
isolated inclusions after migration has stopped. We used bischofite in our experiments
due to its suitable properties as transparency, optical anisotropy, plastic deformation
and recrystallization at relatively low temperatures.
5.2 Experimental techniques The newly developed see-though deformation apparatus (Fig. 5.1) follows the design
of the Urai-rig (1987), but includes a controlled pore fluid system that allows fluid
pressures up to 30 MPa. The design of the apparatus is described in the appendix.
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Figure 5.1: The see-through deformation apparatus. See appendix for a detailed description.
The material used in the experiments is synthetic, polycrystalline bischofite
(MgCl2 · 6 H2O) (Roth; Art.-Nr. A.537.1), because of its high solubility and very
rapid recrystallization at low temperature.
Due to the hygroscopic nature of bischofite the sample was prepared as far as possible
before sample insertion. The first set of o-ring, cover glass, and notched glass plate
was inserted and covered with the sample holder plates (thickness: 300 µm) consisting
of the circular notched plate and the respective rectangular pin guide.
The samples were prepared by quickly pressing molten bischofite between two ingots
separated by space holders with a thickness of 300 µm. It was cut into the desired size
(14 · 8.5 mm) and immediately inserted into the cell, with a few droplets of saturated
bischofite solution (resulting in a fluid content of ~ 2 to 5 %). The outlets were sealed
with silicon oil (M5) to prevent dissolution of the sample due to capillary forces of the
brine layer (Fig. 5.2). Subsequently, the second set of notched glass plate, o-ring and
cover glass plate was inserted and the cell was closed with the precision nut to keep
the seals in place. Then the cell was placed onto the stage and connected with the
loading rams for the moving and pressure regulating pistons, heating coil,
thermocouple and motor controller. The stage was mounted onto the inverse optical
microscope equipped with a digital video camera for continuous documentation of the
observations.
127
The experiments were performed at temperatures of 50, 70 and 90 °C with the fluid
pressure maintained between 0.5 to 1 MPa. The strain rates ranged between 5 · 10-6 to
1 · 10-4 s-1. The microstructural evolution was studied during and after deformation.
Grain boundary migration rates were measured by tracing grain boundaries along
selected orthogonal trajectories.
Figure 5.2: Schematic illustration of the sample setup; a) view from top and b) view in profile. The wet bischofite sample is enclosed by saturated brine, while the outlets of the deformation cell are sealed with silicon oil. The immiscible fluid-fluid-boundary prevents dissolution of the sample and allows experiments in a closed system.
The experiments were performed at temperatures of 50, 70 and 90 °C with the fluid
pressure maintained between 0.5 to 1 MPa. The strain rates ranged between 5 · 10-6 to
1 · 10-4 s-1. The microstructural evolution was studied during and after deformation.
Grain boundary migration rates were measured by tracing grain boundaries along
selected orthogonal trajectories.
5.3 Observations In the presence of saturated solution, bischofite recrystallizes readily at temperatures
below 100 °C.
Several interesting features can be seen, such as the incorporation of fluids into
migrating grain boundaries, large changes in grain boundary migration rate and the
development of twinning and surface grooves.
An overview of the experiments is given in Table 5.1.
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Table 5.1: Conditions of the experiments described in this paper (abbreviations: rx = recrystallization; dyn. = dynamic; metadyn. = metadynamic; stat. = static; gbm = grain boundary migration).
syndeformational postdeformational
tem-
perature strain rate prior strain rate sample
main observations
[°C] [s-1] [s-1]
sg surface grooves 80 fast
db inclusions during heating 70-80
3d-2 dyn rx; nucleation of grain 50 2·10-04
3d-1 dyn rx; consumed grains; gbm rates 50 4·10-06
3s metadyn rx; stat rx; gbm rates 50 4·10-05
2d-2 dyn rx; separation of inclusion 70 4·10-05
2d-1 dyn rx; contraction of fluid films; gbm rates 70 4·10-05
2s metadyn rx; stat rx; fluid films; gbm rates 70 4·10-05
1d twinning; dyn rx; gbm rates 90 2·10-04
1s metadyn rx; stat rx; gbm rates 90 2·10-04
5.3.1 Surface grooves
For one experimental setup the deformation cell was filled with a mixture of synthetic
bischofite grains and saturated solution and heated up to 95 °C, resulting in complete
dissolution of the grains. With subsequent cooling crystals nucleated and grew
parallel to 110 as elongated bischofite (hexahydrate) needles. The crystallization of
tetrahydrate grains was not observed.
At the temperature of 80 °C the piston moved into the deformation chamber. Most
needles were oriented with their long axes perpendicular to the shortening direction.
During shortening at fast rates (~1 · 10-4 s-1) surface grooves developed on surfaces of
some bischofite needles perpendicular to the 110 plane (Fig. 5.3). The grooves
occurred in a more or less regular distance of ~ 10 µm with various depth of up to
5 µm. Five minutes after the deformation had started most of the needles were rotated
and new grooves developed with different orientation with respect to the 110 plane
(Figs. 5.3b & c). After cessation of deformation the roughened surface evolved into a
flattened one again (Fig. 5.3d).
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Figure 5.3: Stress induced grooves on surfaces of elongated bischofite grains at a
temperature of 90 °C. After deformation the surfaces smoothen again (image 022).
Discussion on surface grooves
The motion of the piston is interpreted to have caused bending of some bischofite
needles. The initially flat surface of the elastically strained crystal is morphologically
unstable (see den Brok et al., 2002). The interaction of surface energy and elastic
strain energy drives this surface to roughen by development of valley-ridge structures.
The amplitude of such surface grooves is directly related to the applied stress
(Srolovitz, 1989). Rotation of some needles resulted in different stress conditions on
the bent needles, which are accommodated by different orientations of the grooves.
After cessation of deformation the stress-related grooves disappear as the surface
energy exceeds again and drives the grain’s surface to smoothen again.
5.3.2 Nature of fluid inclusions
The dominant aim of the experiments was the investigation of the nature of fluids
during grain boundary migration. Even if the fluid pressure inside the cell suppresses
air bubbles, very minor amounts of air-filled inclusions are present inside the sample.
Due to the sealing of the outlets with silicon oil, the occurrence of additional small oil
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droplets inside the sample cannot be excluded. These phases are characterized by
different refractive indices that result in different intensities of the solid-liquid
surfaces. The process of recrystallization affects the shape of the inclusions ranging
from circular droplets (spheres) to straightened, tubular or even flattened occurrences.
Thus, to ensure that the investigated inclusions and grain boundaries are filled with
saturated bischofite solution, an inclusion-rich bischofite grain resting in saturated
bischofite solution was heated (Fig. 5.4): if focused the elongated inclusions are
characterized by a sharp solid-liquid boundary, similar to the grain’s transition to the
surrounding solution. With successive dissolution the grain surface reaches the
inclusions and their content flows into the surroundings liquid. The fact that there are
no disturbances or “clouds” around the mouths indicates that the inclusions are filled
with the same phase as the liquid i.e. saturated bischofite solution.
Figure 5.4: Image sequence showing the behavior of fluid inclusions during heating
of bischofite grains (T = 70 to 80 °C). Note the different intensity of the fluid-solid surfaces of the disappearing fluid inclusions. See text for details.
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An example of the pulling back of fluid inclusions is illustrated in Figure 5.5: Directly
after the elongated inclusion is separated the lower right bubble contracts towards a
spherical shape.
Figure 5.5: Image sequence showing an elongated tubular fluid inclusion that is
separated during deformation. Note that the smaller inclusion evolves towards a sphere to minimize its surface energy (T=70 °C; strain rate: 4·10-05 s-1).
5.3.3 Microstructural development
Deformation of the bischofite samples causes intracrystalline defects indicated by
undulose extinction and twinning of some grains.
Predominantly at high angle boundaries new grains nucleate and grow into grains
with presumably higher dislocation density (Fig. 5.6). Due to ongoing deformation
these grains are successively strained and the rate of grain boundaries migration
decreases. Such grain boundaries again are preferred sites for nucleation of new
dynamically recrystallizing grains. By this process the grain size is reduced
significantly, however due to the thickness of our samples (300 µm) and grain sizes
smaller than 20 µm, the grains overlap and make a statistically valuable grain size
analysis difficult.
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Figure 5.6: Image sequence showing the nucleation of grains at old high angle grain
boundaries. Subsequently the strain-free grain grows with its boundaries migrating into the deformed microstructure (T = 50 °C; strain rate: 2·10-4s-1).
During dynamic recrystallization the grain boundary migration rate is observed to be
strongly dependent on the strain rate. In sample 1d deformed with a strain rate of ~ 2 ·
10-4 s-1 at 90 °C migration rates of up to 4000 nm/s are measured, whereas in
experiments performed with strain rates of ~ 6 · 10-5 s-1 at 70 °C (sample 2d-1) and ~
4 · 10-6 s-1 at 50 °C (sample 3d-1) grain boundary migration rates are observed to
reach values of up to 800 nm/s and 70 nm/s, respectively (Fig. 5.7a). Sudden changes
in grain boundary migration rates are common in all deformation experiments,
however more or less constant migration rates are typical (Fig. 5.8a).
After cessation of deformation the grain boundaries continue to move through the
microstructure. Independent on temperature or prior strain rate a general decrease of
migration rates with time is observed in all experiments decreasing rapidly direct after
deformation and slowing down subsequently (Fig. 5.8b). Sudden changes in migration
133
rates are also present but only to a minor extent, predominantly occurring in the
metadynamic recrystallization stage, i.e. shortly after deformation stopped.
Figure 5.7: Diagram showing the dependence of strain rate on the grain boundary
migration rate. a) during deformation and b) after deformation. The range of grain boundary migration rates is indicated by the arrows. See Table 5.1 for sample description.
The grain boundary migration rates in the post-kinematically recrystallized samples
(deformed with a strain rate of ~ 4 · 10-5 s-1 at 50 °C (sample 3s) and 70 °C
(sample 2s)) are significantly slower than during deformation (Fig. 5.7b). However
inside the sample that was deformed with the high strain rate of 2 · 10-4 s-1 the
migration rates during syn- and post-kinematic recrystallization (samples 1d and 1s,
respectively) are of the same order, before it significantly decreases two minutes after
deformation stopped.
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Figure 5.8: Time-displacement curves of migrating grain boundaries for different
experiments. See Table 5.1 for sample description. a) during dynamic recrystallization; note the sudden changes in grain boundary migration rates. b) during post-kinematic recrystallization; during the first minutes the graphs represent metadynamic recrystallization, whereas during static recrystallization the migration rates decrease.
135
Subsequently the microstructural evolution is dominated by the rearrangement of
grains. Grain boundaries are straightened (Fig. 5.9, see solid arrows) and triple
junctions evolve towards equilibrium values of 120° (Fig. 5.9, dashed arrow).
Figure 5.9: Image sequence illustrating the post-kinematic microstructural evolution.
Directly after cessation of deformation a recrystallizing grain grows at a high rate (upper row). With time and decreasing driving force the migration slows down (lower row). The surface energy becomes more important and results in straightened grain boundaries (solid arrow) and triple junctions with 120° angles (dashed arrow) (T = 90 °C; prior strain rate: 2·10-4 s-1).
Fluids in grain boundaries
Inside the samples saturated bischofite solution is present in fluid inclusions and fluid-
filled grain boundaries. Due to deformation, temperature and subsequent
recrystallization grain boundaries start to migrate through the microstructure. When
encountering inclusions they often incorporate the inclusions’ content which then is
distributed along the grain boundary (Fig. 5.10). Behind the moving boundary an
inclusion-free region is common. This image sequence shows that fluid inclusions on
both sides of the boundary are able to flow into the boundary. The thickness of the
fluid-filled grain boundaries is less than 1 µm (see arrow in Fig. 5.10).
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Figure 5.10: Image sequence showing migration of a fluid-filled grain boundary that
incorporates fluids from inclusions leaving behind a zone that is free of inclusions. Note however that the fluid-richer (thicker) part of the boundary is dragged (T= 70 °C; prior strain rate: 4·10-5 s-1).
Situations also exist, in which fluids are left behind, forming cigar-shaped tubular
inclusions which subsequently contract into spherical bubbles. In Figures 5.11 and
5.12 we focus on the spherical inclusions a and b, which are similar in size and
refraction index. Inclusion a is encountered by a grain boundary and its shape changes
while it is swept (images 002-004 in Fig. 11). Subsequently this inclusion is overrun
by a faster migrating grain boundary (images 005-007; see arrow), again without
taking up the fluids. The same grain boundary continues to migrate, but at a
significantly slower rate; now it is able to incorporate inclusion b (Fig. 5.12; images
027-030). It is interesting to mention that inclusion b is moving towards the grain
boundary before both get in contact to each other. The inclusions c are isolated
remnants of a fluid-filled grain boundary of a shrinking grain (Fig. 5.11; images 007-
009).
137
Figure 5.11: Image sequence showing a migrating grain boundary after cessation of
deformation. The initially fast migrating grain boundary slows down with time. The effect of the different migration velocity on the inclusions a and b is explained in detail in the text; note that Figure 5.12 represents the same area at a later annealing stage. Note also inclusions c, which are the isolated remnants of a shrinking grain (T = 70 °C; prior strain rate: 4·10-5s-1).
138
Figure 5.12: Image sequence showing the same migrating grain boundary as in
Figure 5.11. Here the grain boundary migrates slowly and is now able to incorporate the content of inclusion b. It leaves behind a zone that is free of inclusions. See text for discussion (T = 70 °C; prior strain rate: 4·10-5s-1).
139
The experiments also document the formation of isolated inclusions when
straightened fluid-filled grain boundaries stop to migrate and pull back into isolated
bubbles (Fig. 5.13).
Figure 5.13: Image sequence showing the contraction of a fluid film into isolated
bubbles after grain boundary has stopped (last image). The experiment was stopped at this stage, and the isolated inclusions are interpreted to become spherical after additional annealing (T = 70 °C; prior strain rate: 4·10-5s-1).
5.4 Discussion The migration of fluid-filled high angle grain boundaries is the dominant process in
all experiments. In the following we briefly discuss their appearance in transmitted
light and the microstructural evolution observed during and after deformation, before
we focus onto the role of fluids during grain boundary migration.
5.4.1 Appearance of fluid-filled grain boundaries and fluid inclusions
The appearance of fluid-filled grain boundaries and fluid inclusions is the result of the
angle light rays make with the surface between media of different optical density
(Snell’s law). The transition of light rays from the optically denser material bischofite
(refraction index n1 = ~ 1.5) into the optically less dense saturated bischofite solution
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(n2 = ~ 1.3) is characterized by a critical angle above which the light is completely
reflected (Fig. 5.14). For this system it follows that fluid-filled grain boundaries
appear dark if the angle of incidence α is larger than ~ 62 ° (critical angle), while the
parts of the grain boundary are transparent for α smaller the critical angle. Another
possibility of transparency is given, if the fluid-filled grain boundary is oriented
parallel to the path of rays (see right hand part of Figure 5.14b). This optical effect is
also responsible for the appearance of fluid inclusions in a focused plane. While the
center on which the light rays reach the surface under α < ~ 62 ° are transparent, the
outer regions with α being steeper than the critical angle are visible as dark rims.
As the true inclination of the grain boundaries with respect to the path of light rays
can not be resolved, it is unsuitable to draw conclusions on the thickness of the fluid
layer. In addition reflected dark regions of unfocused planes of the sample mask the
true thickness.
Figure 5.14: Sketches to illustrate the appearance of fluid-filled grain boundaries and fluid inclusions as an effect of reflection and refraction at surfaces separating media with different optical density. a) schematic diagram showing the relationship between the angle of incidence (α) and the reflective coefficient in a situation when light rays travel from an optically denser material into a less dense one, i.e. n1 > n2 (with n1 = ~ 1.5 for bischofite and n2 = ~ 1.3 estimated for the fluid); for α > ~ 62 ° the light rays are completely reflected; b) lower part: sketch to show the traveling of light rays through bischofite grains separated by a fluid-filled grain boundary; for 0 < α < 62 °, the light rays are refracted at both solid-fluid interfaces; however, in the steeper inclined part of the grain boundary (α > 62 °) the light rays are fully reflected; the upper part sketches the appearance of this situation in transmitted light microscopy in a focused plane.
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5.4.2 Microstructural evolution
Due to continuous deformation the dislocation density inside the aggregates increases.
This is e.g. documented by the mechanical twins from deformations experiments at
high strain rates. After reaching a critical strain dynamic recrystallization initiates by
nucleation of new grains, preferentially at pre-existing high angle grain boundaries
(Fig. 5.6). The grain boundaries of such strain-free grains migrate into the deformed
microstructure. This is driven by the stored energy of deformation due to elimination
of large amounts of dislocations and results in growth of the recrystallizing grains.
However due to continuing deformation new dislocations are generated and
accumulated also in these grains. The difference in dislocation density decreases and
so does the driving force for further growth, eventually until its cessation. The growth
can also be limited by the nucleation of further grains at the migrating grain
boundaries, which then grow into both deformed old and deformed recrystallized
grains. With continuous deformation at constant strain rate and temperature,
recrystallized grains are characterized by a specific grain size, which is estimated to
be approximately two to three times smaller than the initial grain size; however due to
the thickness of the sample we are not able to give valuable data on both initial and
recrystallized grain size.
With cessation of deformation the nucleation of new grains is stopped. Now, the
dynamically recrystallized microstructure consists of a) small, strain-free
recrystallized grains, b) larger recrystallized grains with a moderate dislocation
density (as they were deformed during growth) and c) eventually unrecrystallized
grains with high dislocation densities.
During the early stages of post-deformation the strain-free grains (a) continue to grow
into the heterogeneously deformed microstructure by the mechanism of metadynamic
recrystallziation (Fig. 5.9; images 063-071). The rate of grain boundary migration
decreases with time as these grains grow progressively either into less deformed
material or into recovering recrystallized (b) or unrecrystallized (c) grains.
This early stage of post-deformation is followed by static recrystallization until the
microstructure is completely recrystallized. During this stage the influence of grain
boundary energy increases. This is indicated by decreasing grain boundary migration
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rates (Fig. 5.8b), successively straightened grain boundaries and triple junctions
evolving towards equilibrium angles of 120° (Fig. 5.9).
After recrystallization is completed normal grain growth takes place. The driving
force is the reduction of grain boundary area, while the triple junctions try to maintain
120° angles. Grains with more than six sides (in two dimensions) grow at the expense
of grains with less than six sides. As the grain boundary energy is significantly
smaller than the stored energy of deformation for recrystallization, grain boundary
velocities at this stage are very slow.
5.4.3 Grain boundary migration rates
The grain boundary migration rates are characterized by the temperature and
deformation conditions at the specific phases of recrystallization (i.e. dynamic,
metadynamic and static recrystallization) and grain growth.
In the metallurgical literature (e.g. Humphreys & Hatherly, 1996; Doherty et al.,
1997) dynamic recrystallization is – after the critical strain is reached – described to
be strongly dependent on strain rate and less sensitive to temperature and strain. This
is also observed in our samples that show the fastest migration rates in experiments
deformed with high strain rates.
Also during metadynamic recrystallization the prior strain rates are directly related to
fast migration rates. In the experiments deformed at a high strain rate (samples
1d and 1s) syn- and initial post-kinematic migration are characterized by the same
rates. However the subsequent static recrystallization is suggested not to be influenced
by prior strain rate, but to be more sensitive to temperature.
The grain boundary migration rates underlie sudden changes (Figs. 5.8a & b) during
both dynamic and metadynamic recrystallization which was also reported by Guillopé
& Poirier (1979) and Urai (1987). These mobility changes can occur when a
migrating grain boundary crosses a high angle boundary or if it sweeps through a
single grain with regional differences in dislocation density. They can be caused by
heterogeneous distribution of dislocations and/or by recovery processes (dynamic and
static) when dislocations start to accumulate in subgrain boundaries.
Besides the effect of stored energy on migration rates, the effect of fluids inside the
grain boundaries has to be considered as their presence raises the grain boundary
mobility and thus also enhance the influence of the orientation-dependence on grain
boundary migration rate (e.g. Urai, 1987).
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Our experiments show that during grain boundary migration inclusions are
incorporated, left behind or even overrun. In the following we describe a simple
model of the evolution of a migrating fluid-filled grain boundary.
5.4.4 Evolution of a migrating fluid-filled grain boundary
Consider a recrystallizing grain that nucleates at an old fluid-filled high angle
boundary and subsequently grows into the deformed microstructure under static
conditions. The grain boundary contains fluids that are derived from the old grain
boundary and migrates by dissolution of the deformed grain, diffusion through the
fluid layer and precipitation on the recrystallizing grain. As the migration is driven by
the difference in dislocation density, its rate is very high in the beginning as the new
grain is still free of dislocations. This often results in sweeping of the fluid-filled grain
boundary over an inclusion without incorporation (Fig. 5.15a-c). It is proposed that
the surface energy of the inclusion exceeds the dragging force of the fast migrating
boundary resulting in the maintenance of a spherical bubble that is now present inside
the recrystallizing grain. With continuing recrystallization the boundary migrates at a
successively decreased rate as recovery process are proposed to result in a decreasing
difference in dislocation density. It takes up the inclusion’s fluid content but only for a
short period (Fig. 5.15d-e). This is due to the still high migration rate that does not
allow the additional fluid to distribute laterally. This results in local thickening of the
fluid layer and hence slowing down of the diffusion-driven migration. The fluid-filled
bulge is dragged by the boundary (Zener drag) until it is cut off and left behind. While
the inclusion contracts immediately into its low energy configuration, the boundary is
released from the dragging force and continues to migrate at a higher rate again. Such
cigar-shaped left-behind inclusions were also reported by Urai (1987). With
subsequent grain boundary migration at slow rates, further incorporated fluids are able
to be distributed laterally and dragged bulges occur less frequently (Fig. 5.15f). This
may explain the often observed fluid-inclusion-free regions of recrystallized grains
behind slow migrating grain boundaries.
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Figure 5.15: Schematic illustration of the effect of the grain boundary migration rate
on the behavior of encountered fluid inclusions (compare with Figs. 5.11 & 5.12): a) a deformed grain contains inclusions of similar size and shape, and is consumed by a strain-free grain at a successively decreasing grain boundary migration rate indicated by the size of the arrows (b-f); in c) the highly mobile fluid-filled grain boundary runs over the fluid inclusion, whereas at lower rates in d) the incorporated inclusion’s content drags the grain boundary until it is cut off and left behind; however in e) the grain boundary migrates at a rate that allows the fluids to redistribute laterally in to the grain boundary. The stippled circles represent the former position of the inclusions.
In the absence of a driving force (equilibrium conditions) grain boundary migration
ceases (Fig. 5.16). Subsequently the fluid layer in the grain boundary contracts into an
array of isolated inclusions.
Figure 5.16: Schematic illustration of the reorganization of fluids in a microstructure
that evolves towards equilibrium conditions. After the grain boundaries are straightened and hence further driving forces are absent, the fluid-filled grain boundaries contract into isolated inclusion that arranged along the fluid-free grain boundaries (compare with Fig. 5.13).
145
5.5 Conclusions • Our transmitted light experiments document the development and migration of
fluid-filled grain boundaries in recrystallizing wet bischofite during and after
deformation.
• Formation of the fluid-filled grain boundaries occurs only at existing high
angle grain boundaries during deformation.
• During grain boundary migration fluid inclusions are swept, incorporated
and/or left behind. This depends on grain boundary velocity, the thickness of
the fluid-filled grain boundary and the size and shape of the fluid inclusions.
• We illustrate direct evidence of the contraction of fluid-filled grain boundaries
into isolated inclusions after attaining equilibrium conditions (grain boundary
migration stops).
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5.6 Appendix
5.6.1 Design of the deformation apparatus
The newly developed see-though deformation apparatus (Fig. 5.1) follows the design
of the Urai-rig (1987), but includes a controlled pore fluid system that allows fluid
pressures up to 30 MPa. The design of the apparatus is shown in Figure 5.A1.
Figure 5.A1: Construction drawing of the essential parts of the deformation
apparatus (lower part: side view; upper part: view from top).
It consists of a pressure vessel (Fig. A2) equipped with high-strength see-through
windows at the top and bottom (cover glass plates). The windows are sealed with o-
rings and the top window is held in place by a precision nut. The assembly is heated
with coils outside the pressure vessel and mantled with insulation material. The
temperature is controlled by a thermocouple.
147
Figure 5.A2: The deformation cell with the sandwiched sample assembly. The cell interior is a sandwich of glass plates, sample holder and sample (Fig. A3).
The inner glass plates have slots on one side which prevent buckling of the piston.
The sample assembly consists of a stainless steel holder and a pin guide that acts as a
forcing block, (both with a thickness of 300 µm). The piston is connected to a
constant-speed step motor and thus serves as moving σ1 piston. It is internally
compensated, i.e. that the loading ram moves into the cell without change of fluid
volume in the cell (Tullis & Tullis, 1986). The opposite piston finely regulates the
fluid pressure.
Although in this design the fluid pressure does not have an effect on the effective
stress, control of the fluid pressure is necessary because the dihedral angle α is a
function of fluid pressure (Holness & Lewis, 1997) and the formation of gas bubbles
in the pore fluid must be suppressed. Suppression of gas bubbles is important since
they pin the grain boundaries and thus affect the grain boundary mobility.
An optical invertoscope with long working distance objectives is used to allow
observations of the experiments. To guarantee continuous investigation of the same
location over days, the microscope is equipped with an image recording system
equipped with a digital camera that takes high resolution images at specific time
intervals.
148
Figure 5.A3: Schematic illustration of the sample assembly. The sample is enclosed
in the sample holder, that is sandwiched between pairs of notched and cover glass plates. The notches allow the loading ram to enter the cell interior.
Acknowledgements
The authors are very grateful to F.-D. Scherberich (Institute for Crystallography,
RWTH Aachen) for constructing the deformation cell and acknowledge C. Hilgers
and F.-D. Scherberich for the many discussions and their essential help in designing
the machine. This project is funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (UR
64/4-1).
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