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The significance of grain-scale stresses in the kinetics of metamorphism

✍ Scribed by J. Wheeler


Book ID
104745714
Publisher
Springer
Year
1987
Tongue
English
Weight
912 KB
Volume
97
Category
Article
ISSN
0010-7999

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✦ Synopsis


During metamorphism phases grow and dissolve dominantly along grain boundaries. Bulk-diffusion models for the development of metamorphic textures often assume that diffusion is homogeneous in regions of each phase, rather than being localised along phase boundaries. Under isotropic stress, chemical potentials of components involved in reactions are likely to be buffered along grain boundaries between phases, thus inhibiting diffusion and growth. Motive forces must exist which overcome this and it is proposed here that local heterogeneous stresses will be important. A mathematical theory for stress-controlled growth is derived. This theory predicts that the growth rates of two phases along their mutual interface will be linked in a quantifiable way. It forms a basis for considering the important effects of stresses induced by local volumetric changes during metamorphism, and it provides a link between these effects and those related to pressure-solution in deforming rocks.


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