Plastic anisotropy and slip systems in ringwoodite deformed to high shear strain in the Rotational Drickamer Apparatus

•Ringwoodite was deformed to high shear strain at 23GPa and 1800K.•Textures were analyzed using synchrotron X-ray diffraction and the Rietveld method.•Lattice strain theory was applied to interpret observed plastic anisotropy.•Polycrystal plasticity modeling was performed to interpret experimental t...

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Published inPhysics of the earth and planetary interiors Vol. 228; pp. 244 - 253
Main Authors Miyagi, Lowell, Amulele, George, Otsuka, Kazuhiko, Du, Zhixue, Farla, Robert, Karato, Shun-Ichiro
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier B.V 01.03.2014
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Summary:•Ringwoodite was deformed to high shear strain at 23GPa and 1800K.•Textures were analyzed using synchrotron X-ray diffraction and the Rietveld method.•Lattice strain theory was applied to interpret observed plastic anisotropy.•Polycrystal plasticity modeling was performed to interpret experimental textures.•Texture and lattice strain analysis are consistent with dominant {111}〈11¯0〉 slip. High shear strain deformation experiments up to equivalent strains of 180% were performed on ringwoodite at conditions of 23GPa and 1800K. At very large shear strains, deviation in the strengths of the (311) and (400) lattice planes is observed, indicating plastic anisotropy. Lattice strain theory was applied to calculate effective viscosities of the available slip systems from the observed plastic anisotropy. We find that the effective viscosities (unitless) are proportional to 0.43, 0.46, and 1.54 for the {111}〈11¯0〉, {11¯0}〈110〉 and {001}〈11¯0〉 slip systems respectively. This indicates that {111}〈11¯0〉 slip is slightly softer than {11¯0}〈11¯0〉 at these conditions. Additionally the {111}〈11¯0〉 slip system has significantly more symmetric variants than the slip systems involving other lattice planes, thus it is expected to dominate deformation. This is confirmed by polycrystal plasticity modeling using the viscoplastic self-consistent code (VPSC) which indicates that simulations with dominant {111}〈11¯0〉 slip provide the best match to experimental textures.
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content type line 23
BNL-106749-2014-JA
DE-AC02-98CH10886
USDOE SC OFFICE OF SCIENCE (SC)
ISSN:0031-9201
1872-7395
DOI:10.1016/j.pepi.2013.09.012