TY - JOUR
T1 - Chemically induced fracturing in alkali feldspar
AU - Scheidl, K.S.
AU - Schäffer, Anne-Kathrin
AU - Petrishcheva, E.
AU - Habler, G.
AU - Fischer, F.D.
AU - Schreuer, J.
AU - Abart, R.
PY - 2013/1/1
Y1 - 2013/1/1
N2 - Fracturing in alkali feldspar during Na-K cation exchange with a NaCl-KCl salt melt was studied experimentally. Due to a marked composition dependence of the lattice parameters of alkali feldspar, any composition gradient arising from cation exchange causes coherency stress. If this stress exceeds a critical level fracturing occurs. Experiments were performed on potassium-rich gem-quality alkali feldspars with polished (010) and (001) surfaces. When the feldspar was shifted toward more sodium-rich compositions over more than about 10 mole %, a system of parallel cracks with regular crack spacing formed. The cracks have a general (h0l) orientation and do not correspond to any of the feldspar cleavages. The cracks are rather oriented (sub)-perpendicular to the direction of maximum tensile stress. The critical stress needed to initiate fracturing is about 325 MPa. The critical stress intensity factor for the propagation of mode I cracks, K, is estimated as 2.30-2.72 MPa m (73-86 MPa mm) from a systematic relation between characteristic crack spacing and coherency stress. An orientation mismatch of 18° between the crack normal and the direction of maximum tensile stress is ascribed to the anisotropy of the longitudinal elastic stiffness which has pronounced maxima in the crack plane and a minimum in the direction of the crack normal.
AB - Fracturing in alkali feldspar during Na-K cation exchange with a NaCl-KCl salt melt was studied experimentally. Due to a marked composition dependence of the lattice parameters of alkali feldspar, any composition gradient arising from cation exchange causes coherency stress. If this stress exceeds a critical level fracturing occurs. Experiments were performed on potassium-rich gem-quality alkali feldspars with polished (010) and (001) surfaces. When the feldspar was shifted toward more sodium-rich compositions over more than about 10 mole %, a system of parallel cracks with regular crack spacing formed. The cracks have a general (h0l) orientation and do not correspond to any of the feldspar cleavages. The cracks are rather oriented (sub)-perpendicular to the direction of maximum tensile stress. The critical stress needed to initiate fracturing is about 325 MPa. The critical stress intensity factor for the propagation of mode I cracks, K, is estimated as 2.30-2.72 MPa m (73-86 MPa mm) from a systematic relation between characteristic crack spacing and coherency stress. An orientation mismatch of 18° between the crack normal and the direction of maximum tensile stress is ascribed to the anisotropy of the longitudinal elastic stiffness which has pronounced maxima in the crack plane and a minimum in the direction of the crack normal.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84880334558
U2 - 10.1007/s00269-013-0617-1
DO - 10.1007/s00269-013-0617-1
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84880334558
SN - 0342-1791
VL - 41
SP - 1
EP - 16
JO - Physics and Chemistry of Minerals
JF - Physics and Chemistry of Minerals
ER -