Award Abstract # 0711365
Rheology of Mantle Rocks at High Pressure

NSF Org: EAR
Division Of Earth Sciences
Recipient: THE RESEARCH FOUNDATION FOR THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK
Initial Amendment Date: June 4, 2007
Latest Amendment Date: July 9, 2009
Award Number: 0711365
Award Instrument: Continuing Grant
Program Manager: Robin Reichlin
EAR
 Division Of Earth Sciences
GEO
 Directorate for Geosciences
Start Date: July 1, 2007
End Date: June 30, 2010 (Estimated)
Total Intended Award Amount: $450,002.00
Total Awarded Amount to Date: $450,002.00
Funds Obligated to Date: FY 2007 = $150,001.00
FY 2008 = $150,001.00

FY 2009 = $150,000.00
History of Investigator:
  • Donald Weidner (Principal Investigator)
    Donald.Weidner@stonybrook.edu
Recipient Sponsored Research Office: SUNY at Stony Brook
W5510 FRANKS MELVILLE MEMORIAL LIBRARY
STONY BROOK
NY  US  11794-0001
(631)632-9949
Sponsor Congressional District: 01
Primary Place of Performance: SUNY at Stony Brook
W5510 FRANKS MELVILLE MEMORIAL LIBRARY
STONY BROOK
NY  US  11794-0001
Primary Place of Performance
Congressional District:
01
Unique Entity Identifier (UEI): M746VC6XMNH9
Parent UEI: M746VC6XMNH9
NSF Program(s): Geophysics
Primary Program Source: app-0107 
01000809DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT

01000910DB NSF RESEARCH & RELATED ACTIVIT
Program Reference Code(s): 0000, 1031, OTHR
Program Element Code(s): 157400
Award Agency Code: 4900
Fund Agency Code: 4900
Assistance Listing Number(s): 47.050

ABSTRACT

The Earth is a dynamic body, constantly evolving, changing the shapes of oceans, building mountains. Our understanding of these phenomena includes a recognition of the plastic behavior of minerals at high temperature. Plate tectonics asserts that stable surface plates are mechanically isolated from the deep Earth. Thermal evolutionary models transport heat by vertical flow of minerals. The rebound from glaciers is testimony to the viscous flow beneath.

This project is to study the effects of pressure on the plastic character of the major minerals of the Earth's transition zone. While we have vastly improved our understanding of the flow properties of minerals over the past several years, the effects of pressure induced phase transitions are still poorly constrained. The flow characteristics of the high-pressure forms of olivine and pyroxene, the phases that control flow in the deep Earth, are virtually unknown.

New tools have been developed that are capable of attacking this problem. Using synchrotron x-ray sources, it is possible to measure both diffraction spectra and direct images of samples in a multi-anvil press while the sample is at high pressure and temperature. It is now possible to determine the stress field from the x-ray diffraction signal and strain from shadow-graph images. One complete data collection cycle that yields values of stress and strain takes about five minutes. Thus, time resolution of 300 seconds is possible and time derivatives of these parameters can be obtained. Stress accuracy is a few tens of MPa, and strain rates of 10-7 s-1 can be resolved. The DDIA has proven successful in generating a steady state flow condition for 10's of per cent strain. Thus, texture and defect structures can equilibrate during the experiment and quantitative flow laws obtained.

This program is investigating the quantitative flow properties of wadsleyite, ringwoodite, and high-pressure garnet at high pressure. Samples are synthesized in the high-pressure laboratory at Stony Brook. The synchrotron at Brookhaven National Labs is used for the rheology study. The results are interpreted in terms of their implications on deep focus earthquakes and mantle viscosity structure. The rheology of olivine at subduction zone conditions with large strains is also being studied. The results are being quantified as a constraint on deep focus earthquakes.

This research is providing a learning experience for students including graduate students in the preparation of their PhD and undergraduates students in the focus of a summer research project. The results will be used throughout the Earth sciences as fundamental information on the behavior of the Earth's interior. The tools that are developed will be made available to other researchers for studying strength related properties of materials. These tools (software and hardware) will immediately become part of the COMPRES operated synchrotron facility and available to all in the community that wish to use them.

PUBLICATIONS PRODUCED AS A RESULT OF THIS RESEARCH

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(Showing: 1 - 10 of 14)
Chen, J. H.;Li, L.;Yu, T.;Long, H. B.;Weidner, D.;Wang, L. P.;Vaughan, M.; "Do Reuss and Voigt bounds really bound in high-pressure rheology experiments?" Journal of Physics-Condensed Matter , v.18 , 2006 , p.S1049-S10
Dobson, D. P.;Hunt, S. A.;Li, L.;Weidner, D.; "Measurement of thermal diffusivity at high pressures and temperatures using synchrotron radiography" Mineralogical Magazine , v.72 , 2008 , p.653-658
Li, L., A. Addad, D. Weidner, H. Long, and J. Chen "High pressure deformation in two-phase aggregates" Tectonophysics , v.439(1-4 , 2007 , p.107-117
Li, L. and D.J. Weidner "Effect of phase transitions on bulk dispersion and attenuation: implications for the Earth." Nature , v.454 , 2008
Li, L.;Carrez, P.;Weidner, D.; "Effect of cation ordering and pressure on spinel elasticity by ab initio simulation" American Mineralogist , v.92 , 2007 , p.174-178
Li, L., L.W. Wang, and M.T. Vaughan; "Elastic Softening of Peridotite Due to the Presence of Melt Phases at High Pressure" Phys Earth Planet Sci. , 2008 , p.1016 10.1016/j.pepi.2008.05.009
Raterron, P., J. Chen, L. Li, D. Weidner, and P. Cordier "Pressure-induced slip-system transition in forsterite: Single-crystal rheological properties at mantle pressure and temperature." American Mineralogist , v.92 , 2007 , p.1436
Raterron, P., J. Chen, L. Li, D. Weidner, and P. Cordier "Pressure-induced slip-system transition in forsterite: Single-crystal rheological properties at mantle pressure and temperature." American Mineralogist , v.92 , 2007 , p.1436
Raterron, P.;Li, L.;Chen, J.;Cordier, P.;Weidner, D.; "Activity of olivine slip systems at high pressure and temperature" Lithos , v.73 , 2004 , p.S92-S92
Thompson, Meagan; T, Xiao Shen, and Philip B. Allen "Density functional calculation of electronic structure and phonon spectra of Na2O" Phys. Rev. B 79, 113108 , v.79 , 2009 , p.113108
Wang, Y.;Wen, L. X.;Weidner, D.; "Upper mantle SH- and P-velocity structures and compositional models beneath southern Africa" Earth and Planetary Science Letters , v.267 , 2008 , p.596-608
(Showing: 1 - 10 of 14)

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