High-magnitude stresses induced by mineral-hydration reactions

Author:

Plümper Oliver1,Wallis David12,Teuling Floris1,Moulas Evangelos3,Schmalholz Stefan M.4,Amiri Hamed1,Müller Thomas5

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Earth Sciences, Utrecht University, 3584 CB Utrecht, Netherlands

2. 2Department of Earth Sciences, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3EQ, UK

3. 3Institute of Geosciences, Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz, 55099 Mainz, Germany

4. 4Institute of Earth Sciences, University of Lausanne, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland

5. 5Department of Mineralogy, Georg-August-Universität Göttingen, 37073 Göttingen, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Fluid-rock interactions play a critical role in Earth’s lithosphere and environmental subsurface systems. In the absence of chemical mass transport, mineral-hydration reactions would be accompanied by a solid-volume increase that may induce differential stresses and associated reaction-induced deformation processes, such as dilatant fracturing to increase fluid permeability. However, the magnitudes of stresses that manifest in natural systems remain poorly constrained. We used optical and electron microscopy to show that one of the simplest hydration reactions in nature [MgO + H2O = Mg(OH)2] can induce stresses of several hundred megapascals, with local stresses of as much as ∼1.5 GPa. We demonstrate that these stresses not only cause fracturing but also induce plastic deformation with dislocation densities (1015 m−2) exceeding those typical of tectonically deformed rocks. If these reaction-induced stresses can be transmitted across larger length scales, they may influence the bulk stress state of reacting regions. Moreover, the structural damage induced may be the first step toward catastrophic rock failure, triggering crustal seismicity.

Publisher

Geological Society of America

Subject

Geology

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4. Becker, G.F., and Day, A.L., 1905, The linear force of growing crystals: Proceedings of the Washington Academy of Sciences, v. 7, p. 283–288.

5. Induced stress and secondary mass transfer: Thermodynamic basis for the tendency toward constant-volume constraint in diffusion metasomatism;Carmichael,1987

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