Temperature dependence of [100](010) and [001](010) dislocation mobility in natural olivine


Introduction

  • Lattice preferred orientation (LPO) in mantle peridotite
    • caused by dislocation creep with a dominant slip system
    • indication of dynamic flow in the mantle
    • causing seismic anisotropy
      • What does the decrease in seismic anisotropy with depth indicate?
        • transition in LPO pattern with pressure?
        • transition in LPO pattern with temperature?
        • decrease in strain rate with depth?
  • LPO types of peridotite
    • A-Type: olivine a-axis parallel to lineation, b-axis normal to the foliation
      • Slip in the [100] direction on the (010) plane: a-slip
    • B-Type: olivine c-axis parallel to lineation, b-axis normal to the foliation
      • Slip in the [001] direction on the (010) plane: c-slip
    • AG-Type: a- and c-axes on the foliation, , b-axis normal to the foliation
      • What kind of slip?
  • What conditions are these olivine fabrics reflect?
    • If temperature, the mobility of dislocations produced by a- and c-slips has different temperature dependence.
  • Dislocation recovery experiment
    • Dislocations are annihilated by coalescence of dislocations with opposite sign
    • Measurement of annihilation rate by comparing the initial and final dislocation density after annealing under quasi-hydrostatic conditions.
    • Dislocation annihilation rate ∝ dislocation mobility

Experimental procedure

  • Production of dislocations in a- and c-slip systems
    • Deformation of olivine single crystals in a shear geometry of the [100] or [001] direction on the (010) plane
    • at 3 GPa and 1600 K
Assembly for shear deformation of single crystal olivine
Assembly for shear deformation of single crystal olivine
  • Annealing for dislocation annihilation
    • Ambient pressure and temperatures of 1460 to 1760 K
    • 20 min to 24.5 h
    • fO2 near the Ni-NiO buffer
  • Dislocation density measurement
    • oxidation decoration
    • SEM

Results

  • Produced dislocations
    • a-slip
        • Edge dislocation
        • Burgers vector [100]
        • Elongation in [001]
      • a-dislocations
    • c-slip
        • Screw dislocation
        • Burgers vector [001]
        • Elongation in [001]
      • a-dislocations
  • Annihilation rates
    • Absolute values of dislocation annihilation rate of a- and c-dislocations: comparable
      • within 0.3 log scale
    • Temperature dependence: identical
      • Activation energy
        • a-dislocation: 400+-20 kJ/mol
        • c-dislocation: 400+-30 kJ/mol
Annihilation rates of dislocations produced by the  [100](010) and [001](010) slips
Comparison of dislocation annihilation rates against temperature

Discussion

  • Mechanism of dislocation motion
    • Smaller activation energy than obtained by deformation experiments (500 kJ/mol)
      • different mechanism of dislocation motion between deformation and recovery experiments
    • Identical activation energy to that of Si diffusion (410+-30 kJ/mol)
      • Dislocation motion: diffusion-controlled
        • climb control
    • Comparable annihilation rate and identical activation energy between a- and c-dislocations
      • very small geometry factor
      • independence of dislocation character
        • edge or screw
      • supporting diffusion-control mechanism
  • Fabric transition of the mantle olivine
    • Temperature conditions causes no fabric transition between A-type and B-type
      • identical temperature dependence of the responsible dislocations
    • Fabric transition by strain rate
      • Deformation experiment:
        • very high creep rate
        • glide control
        • anisotropy to produce A- or  B-type fabrics
        • No AG-type fabrics
      • Recovery experiment:
        • corresponding to low strain rates
        • climb control
        • less isotropic
          • little difference between a- and c-slips
          • could produce AG-type fabric
  • Possible fabric transition due to lowering strain rate with increasing depth
    • glide control -> climb control
    • A-type or B-type fabric -> AG-type fabric
    • AG-type fabric will be dominant in the oceanic asthenosphere

Wang, L., S. Blaha, Z. Pinter, R. Farla, T. Kawazoe, N. Miyajima, K. Michibayashi and T. Katsura, Temperature dependence of [100](010) and [001](010) dislocation mobility in natural olivine, Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 441, 81-90, 2016.