Micro- to Nanoscale Investigation of Structures and Chemical Heterogeneities in Geomaterials: Impacts on Rheology

The presence of and interactions between structural defects, fluids, and trace elements during deformation play a vital role in the manner in which materials respond to an applied stress. Although the links between crystal defects and trace element mobility have been lying at the frontier of researc...

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Main Author: Dubosq, Renelle
Other Authors: Schneider, David
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10393/42806
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-27023
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spelling ndltd-uottawa.ca-oai-ruor.uottawa.ca-10393-428062021-10-14T05:23:28Z Micro- to Nanoscale Investigation of Structures and Chemical Heterogeneities in Geomaterials: Impacts on Rheology Dubosq, Renelle Schneider, David nanostructure chemical heterogeneity atom probe tomography rheology The presence of and interactions between structural defects, fluids, and trace elements during deformation play a vital role in the manner in which materials respond to an applied stress. Although the links between crystal defects and trace element mobility have been lying at the frontier of research in Earth sciences, the role of fluids and the underlying physico-chemical processes linking them remain poorly understood. Investigation of these nanometer scale processes requires a correlative approach combining high-spatial resolution analytical techniques. This thesis integrates novel 2D and 3D structural and geochemical mapping methods such as electron channeling contrast imaging, electron backscatter diffraction, scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) and atom probe tomography (APT) to interrogate the atomic structure and composition of geomaterials in an attempt to better understand long-standing questions in Earth sciences and build bridges between materials science and geoscience. The processes investigated in this thesis include: 1) the underlying diffusion processes that mobilize trace elements into deformation-induced nanostructures; 2) the mechanisms of trace element segregation associated with fluid inclusions; 3) the influence of fluid inclusions on the mobility of structural defects and trace element mobility; and 4) the initial stages of bubble nucleation in the presence of nanoscale chemical heterogeneities. Ultimately, this research interrogates the feedbacks between deformation and trace element diffusion processes, fundamentally investigating their impact on rheology. More specifically, the thesis investigates the influence of deformation and associated nanostructures on the remobilization of trace elements and, in turn, the influence of trace elements on the nucleation and mobility of nanostructures. The combined work successfully identified two diffusion mechanisms for deformation-induced trace element mobility, characterized fluid-inclusions in APT data, documented two processes that led to proposing a new fluid inclusion-induced hardening model, and documented direct evidence of bubble nucleation on the surface of nanoscale chemical heterogeneities. This work not only pushes the limits of high-spatial resolution analytical techniques including STEM and APT, but the results have significant transdisciplinary implications in the fields of geoscience, materials science, engineering, and analytical microscopy. 2021-10-12T18:30:39Z 2021-10-12T18:30:39Z 2021-10-12 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10393/42806 http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-27023 en application/pdf Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic nanostructure
chemical heterogeneity
atom probe tomography
rheology
spellingShingle nanostructure
chemical heterogeneity
atom probe tomography
rheology
Dubosq, Renelle
Micro- to Nanoscale Investigation of Structures and Chemical Heterogeneities in Geomaterials: Impacts on Rheology
description The presence of and interactions between structural defects, fluids, and trace elements during deformation play a vital role in the manner in which materials respond to an applied stress. Although the links between crystal defects and trace element mobility have been lying at the frontier of research in Earth sciences, the role of fluids and the underlying physico-chemical processes linking them remain poorly understood. Investigation of these nanometer scale processes requires a correlative approach combining high-spatial resolution analytical techniques. This thesis integrates novel 2D and 3D structural and geochemical mapping methods such as electron channeling contrast imaging, electron backscatter diffraction, scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) and atom probe tomography (APT) to interrogate the atomic structure and composition of geomaterials in an attempt to better understand long-standing questions in Earth sciences and build bridges between materials science and geoscience. The processes investigated in this thesis include: 1) the underlying diffusion processes that mobilize trace elements into deformation-induced nanostructures; 2) the mechanisms of trace element segregation associated with fluid inclusions; 3) the influence of fluid inclusions on the mobility of structural defects and trace element mobility; and 4) the initial stages of bubble nucleation in the presence of nanoscale chemical heterogeneities. Ultimately, this research interrogates the feedbacks between deformation and trace element diffusion processes, fundamentally investigating their impact on rheology. More specifically, the thesis investigates the influence of deformation and associated nanostructures on the remobilization of trace elements and, in turn, the influence of trace elements on the nucleation and mobility of nanostructures. The combined work successfully identified two diffusion mechanisms for deformation-induced trace element mobility, characterized fluid-inclusions in APT data, documented two processes that led to proposing a new fluid inclusion-induced hardening model, and documented direct evidence of bubble nucleation on the surface of nanoscale chemical heterogeneities. This work not only pushes the limits of high-spatial resolution analytical techniques including STEM and APT, but the results have significant transdisciplinary implications in the fields of geoscience, materials science, engineering, and analytical microscopy.
author2 Schneider, David
author_facet Schneider, David
Dubosq, Renelle
author Dubosq, Renelle
author_sort Dubosq, Renelle
title Micro- to Nanoscale Investigation of Structures and Chemical Heterogeneities in Geomaterials: Impacts on Rheology
title_short Micro- to Nanoscale Investigation of Structures and Chemical Heterogeneities in Geomaterials: Impacts on Rheology
title_full Micro- to Nanoscale Investigation of Structures and Chemical Heterogeneities in Geomaterials: Impacts on Rheology
title_fullStr Micro- to Nanoscale Investigation of Structures and Chemical Heterogeneities in Geomaterials: Impacts on Rheology
title_full_unstemmed Micro- to Nanoscale Investigation of Structures and Chemical Heterogeneities in Geomaterials: Impacts on Rheology
title_sort micro- to nanoscale investigation of structures and chemical heterogeneities in geomaterials: impacts on rheology
publisher Université d'Ottawa / University of Ottawa
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/10393/42806
http://dx.doi.org/10.20381/ruor-27023
work_keys_str_mv AT dubosqrenelle microtonanoscaleinvestigationofstructuresandchemicalheterogeneitiesingeomaterialsimpactsonrheology
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