4.5 Article

TitaniQ deformed: Experimental deformation of out-of-equilibrium quartz porphyroclasts

Journal

JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY
Volume 116, Issue -, Pages 207-222

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsg.2018.07.012

Keywords

Quartz; TitaniQ; Microstructures; Recrystallization mechanisms; Thermobarometry; Experimental rock deformation

Funding

  1. Earth Sciences Division of the National Science Foundation [1551343, 1220295/1543627, 1625835]
  2. GSA research award
  3. Directorate For Geosciences [1625835] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The role of deformation on the equilibration of Ti concentrations in quartz was investigated by running experiments on out-of-equilibrium quartz crystals embedded as porphyroclasts within quartz aggregates. Quartz crystals were first grown from a hydrostatic fluid to set the initial Ti content; crystals grown at temperatures above (925 degrees C) and below (875 degrees C) the deformation temperature (900 degrees C) contain Ti contents similar to 60 ppm higher or lower than the equilibrium solubility. These out-of-equilibrium quartz crystals were then deformed as porphyroclasts by embedding them in a matrix composed of either dry or wet quartz to induce two end-member deformation regimes, high-stress or low-stress, respectively. In high-stress experiments, quartz porphyroclasts contain deformation bands and undulose extinction, with some grains showing evidence for grain boundary bulging (BLG) recrystallization. In low-stress experiments, some grains deformed to high strains with minimal evidence for dynamic recrystallization, resulting in ribbon grains, whereas others recrystallized by dislocation creep processes, showing microstructural evidence for subgrain rotation (SGR) and grain boundary migration (GBM) recrystallization. By comparing quartz microstructures with patterns of Ti re-distribution in variably deformed and recrystallized porphyroclasts, we find that grains deformed to high strain with minimal re crystallization show little to no evidence for re-equilibration, whereas grains that recrystallized via grain boundary processes have equilibrated Ti contents that reflect the pressure-temperature conditions of deformation.

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