Login / Signup

Strength of Dry and Wet Quartz in the Low-Temperature Plasticity Regime: Insights From Nanoindentation.

Alberto CeccatoLuca MenegonLars N Hansen
Published in: Geophysical research letters (2022)
At low-temperature and high-stress conditions, quartz deformation is controlled by the kinetics of dislocation glide, that is, low-temperature plasticity (LTP). To investigate the relationship between intracrystalline H 2 O content and the yield strength of quartz LTP, we have integrated spherical and Berkovich nanoindentation tests at room temperature on natural quartz with electron backscatter diffraction and secondary-ion mass spectrometry measurements of intracrystalline H 2 O content. Dry (<20 wt ppm H 2 O) and wet (20-100 wt ppm H 2 O) crystals exhibit comparable indentation hardness. Quartz yield strength, which is proportional to indentation hardness, seems to be unaffected by the intracrystalline H 2 O content when deformed under room temperature, high-stress conditions. Pre-indentation intracrystalline microstructure may have provided a high density of dislocation sources, influencing the first increments of low-temperature plastic strains. Our results have implications for fault strength at the frictional-viscous transition and during transient deformation by LTP, such as seismogenic loading and post-seismic creep.
Keyphrases