Role of dynamic grain boundary wetting in fluid circulation beneath volcanic arcs

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Abstract

We report the influence of shear deformation on the microstructure of water-saturated olivine and clinopyroxene aggregates. Prior to deformation, the aqueous fluid was isolated in pockets along grain corners in the olivine-water aggregates, while it was interconnected by a network of grain-edge tubules in the clinopyroxene-water aggregate. During deformation of both types of aggregates, the aqueous fluid phase segregates into grain boundaries at an angle of ∼16° to the shear direction, inclined in a sense antithetic to the applied shear. Fluid-rich planes formed by such dynamic wetting of grain boundaries lead to the formation of high permeability paths in the matrix. In a deforming mantle, such high permeability paths will enhance the efficiency of aqueous fluid extraction from subducting slabs. Copyright 2006 by the American Geophysical Union.

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Hier-Majumder, S., & Kohlstedt, D. L. (2006). Role of dynamic grain boundary wetting in fluid circulation beneath volcanic arcs. Geophysical Research Letters, 33(8). https://doi.org/10.1029/2006GL025716

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