Experimental Observation of a New Attenuation Mechanism in hcp‐Metals That May Operate in the Earth's Inner Core

Author:

Hunt Simon A.1ORCID,Walker Andrew M.23ORCID,Lord Oliver T.4ORCID,Stackhouse Stephen2ORCID,Schardong Lewis5ORCID,Armstrong Lora S.6ORCID,Parsons Andrew J.7ORCID,Lloyd Geoffrey E.2ORCID,Wheeler John8ORCID,Fenech Danielle M.9ORCID,Michalik Stefan10ORCID,Whitaker Matthew L.11ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Materials University of Manchester Manchester UK

2. School of Earth and Environment University of Leeds Leeds UK

3. Department of Earth Sciences University of Oxford Oxford UK

4. School of Earth Sciences University of Bristol Bristol UK

5. The Geological Survey of Israel Jerusalem Israel

6. Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences TU Delft Delft The Netherlands

7. School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences University of Plymouth Plymouth UK

8. School of Environmental Sciences Jane Herdman Laboratories University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

9. Department of Physics Cavendish Laboratory University of Cambridge Cambridge UK

10. Diamond Light Source Ltd., Harwell Science and Innovation Campus Didcot UK

11. Department of Geosciences Mineral Physics Institute Stony Brook University Stony Brook NY USA

Abstract

AbstractSeismic observations show the Earth's inner core has significant and unexplained variation in seismic attenuation with position, depth and direction. Interpreting these observations is difficult without knowledge of the visco‐ or anelastic dissipation processes active in iron under inner core conditions. Here, a previously unconsidered attenuation mechanism is observed in zinc, a low pressure analog of hcp‐iron, during small strain sinusoidal deformation experiments. The experiments were performed in a deformation‐DIA combined with X‐radiography, at seismic frequencies (∼0.003–0.1 Hz), high pressure and temperatures up to ∼80% of melting temperature. Significant dissipation (0.077 ≤ Q−1(ω) ≤ 0.488) is observed along with frequency dependent softening of zinc's Young's modulus and an extremely small activation energy for creep (⩽7 kJ mol−1). In addition, during sinusoidal deformation the original microstructure is replaced by one with a reduced dislocation density and small, uniform, grain size. This combination of behavior collectively reflects a mode of deformation called “internal stress superplasticity”; this deformation mechanism is unique to anisotropic materials and activated by cyclic loading generating large internal stresses. Here we observe a new form of internal stress superplasticity, which we name as “elastic strain mismatch superplasticity.” In it the large stresses are caused by the compressional anisotropy. If this mechanism is also active in hcp‐iron and the Earth's inner‐core it will be a contributor to inner‐core observed seismic attenuation and constrain the maximum inner‐core grain‐size to ≲10 km.

Funder

Natural Environment Research Council

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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