Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Side 97

Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga) - 01.01.1977, Side 97
95 stance r from the centre is p(r) =p0(r0/r)3. Now replace the fluid by a dense nanocrystal whose equilibrium pressure p0 is far above the surrounding lithostatic pressure. Then the crystal tends to expand with the pressure p0. In equilibrium the radial pressure then falls very rapidly with distance in the elastic medium, so that the nanocrystal will be kept within a thin shell of high pressure. This shell of local high pressure is then in no disagreement with a far lower general lithostatic pressure. We shall now quote some experimental data on the densi- fication of silica glass under high pressure. According to (73), SiOo-glass was irreversibly densified by a pressure up to 250 kbars. The threshold for a significant densification of this kind was found to be about 60 kbars. It is well-known that silica glass can be irreversibly densified by the application of high pressure but an explanation of this effect seems not to have been given. We suggest that the densification is due to polymorphic transitions of the nanocrystals, of which the glass is taken to consist, cf. (72). “In general, when the glass is heated under pressure, still denser material results” (73). This may mean both that rise of temperature eases the at- tainment of the polymorphic equilibrium, or that by lowering of viscosity the outer pressure is applied more directly to the individual nanocrystal, while that might be hampered by stresses in a glass of higher viscosity. Wackerle, 1962, found shock densification from 2.2 to 2.4 -2.5 g/cm3 after recovery from a pressure of about 250 kbars (73). “All investigators report that the densified material is very stable at room temperature but anneals very quickly at temperatures above few hundred degrees” (73). This shows that by sufficiently high viscosity of the “glass”, the densified nanocrystals are unable to expand to lighter forms, although the external pressure is low. They are then surrounded by a high-pressure shell as we have inferred above. From this result we infer that the relatively low lithostatic pressure at the oceanic Moho is per se no fundamental argu-
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Greinar (Vísindafélag Íslendinga)

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