DISLOCATION INTERACTIONS IN EXPERIMENTALLY DEFORMED BIOTITE Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Biotite single crystals shortened experimentally in orientations that maximize critical resolved shear stresses on (001) in directions 110, 010 and 310 have been examined by transmission electron microscopy. In all samples, dislocations are confined to the basal plane with Burgers vectors of 1/2110 and 100, consistent with previous determinations of mica slip systems. Occasional partial dislocations that bound stacking faults form extended dislocations of these same systems. Typically dislocations are concentrated in complex arrays in local regions of the samples; isolated or widely spaced dislocations are the exception. Within these arrays, a variety of interactions between the dislocations are suggested by the geometrical arrangements of dislocations that cross over one another on parallel (001) planes sufficiently close together for elastic interaction, and dislocations on the same (001) plane in networks and parallel arrays. Crossing dislocations of opposite sign on separate (001) planes form stable dipole segments where they overlap. Attractive and repulsive interactions between overlapping dislocations of like sign are evident as well. Dislocation networks occur in all samples and may exhibit a variety of complexly distorted geometries. The spacing of dislocations in parallel arrays do not match models for standard dislocation pile-ups, consistent with observations showing these arrays involve dislocation multipoles. The observed dislocation arrays and interactions resemble those reported for Stage I easy-glide deformation of FCC and HCP metals. Basal shear strengths are probably largely controlled by the development of multipoles and dislocations that pile up behind them. 1993.

published proceedings

  • JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY

author list (cited authors)

  • CHRISTOFFERSEN, R., & KRONENBERG, A. K.

citation count

  • 46

complete list of authors

  • CHRISTOFFERSEN, R||KRONENBERG, AK

publication date

  • January 1993