Publication
Title
Supporting data for "In situ Quantitative Tensile Tests on Antigorite in a Transmission Electron Microscope"
Author
Abstract
The determination of the mechanical properties of serpentinites is essential towards the understanding of the mechanics of faulting and subduction. Here, we present the first in situ tensile tests on antigorite in a transmission electron microscope. A push-to-pull deformation device is used to perform quantitative tensile tests, during which force and displacement are measured, while the microstructure is imaged with the microscope. The experiments have been performed at room temperature on beams prepared by focused ion beam. The specimens are not single crystals despite their small sizes. Orientation mapping indicated that some grains were well-oriented for plastic slip. However, no dislocation activity has been observed even though engineering tensile stress went up to 700 MPa. We show also that antigorite does not exhibit an pure elastic-brittle behaviour since, despite the presence of defects, the specimens underwent plastic deformation and did not fail within the elastic regime. Instead, we observe that strain localizes at grain boundaries. All observations concur to show that under our experimental conditions, grain boundary sliding is the dominant deformation mechanism. This study sheds a new light on the mechanical properties of antigorite and calls for further studies on the structure and properties of grain boundaries in antigorite and more generally in phyllosilicates.
Language
English
Related publication(s)
Publication
Zenodo , 2019
DOI
10.5281/ZENODO.3583135
Volume/pages
Full text (Publisher's DOI)
UAntwerpen
Faculty/Department
Research group
Project info
Rheology of earth materials: closing the gap between timescales in the laboratory and in the mantle (TimeMan).
Publication type
Subject
Affiliation
Publications with a UAntwerp address
External links
Record
Identifier
Creation 26.05.2020
Last edited 27.02.2024
To cite this reference