Crystallisation%20from%20melts - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Crystallisation%20from%20melts

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Crystallisation from melts Why do crystals form? What controls their shape and size? Three aspects to the growth of a crystal are Nucleation: formation of a stable ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Crystallisation%20from%20melts


1
Crystallisation from melts
  • Why do crystals form?
  • What controls their shape and size?
  • Three aspects to the growth of a crystal are
  • Nucleation formation of a stable nucleus
  • Diffusion of material to the nucleus
  • Growth of the crystal by adding atoms
  • The slowest of these three aspects controls the
    shape and size.

2
Different types of crystals
  • If diffusion is slow, the crystal grows spikes
    to get at the new material needed forms a
    dendrite or a skeletal crystal
  • If nucleation is the restriction (a) spherulites
    can form (many radiating crystals grow from one
    nucleus or (b) a few large crystals
  • If growth is the restriction (slow
    crystallisation) then well formed crystals
    develop.

3
SIMPLE TWINS
  • Sanidine and orthoclase phenocrysts seem to
    invariably have a simple twin. Why might this be
    so?
  • Option A It is groups of atoms in twin
    orientation that grow large enough to form a
    stable nucleus.
  • Option B Trace elements that are concentrated in
    the first stage of growth (Ba,Sr) allow a twin to
    form.
  • Option C ???????

4
Growth rate control
  • A)Interface kinetics-the movement of material
    in/out across crystal/melt interface and
    attachment onto the crystal
  • B)Transport of nutrients in and impurities away
    from boundary
  • C)Transport of heat of crystallisation away from
    the interface.
  • All linked to undercooling. (A) dominant at low
    degrees, (B)and/or (C) dominant at high.

5
GRAINSIZE
  • Largely controlled by the nucleation rate
    (influenced by the growth rate). Few nuclei leads
    to large crystals, many leads to small.
  • Few nuclei if degree of undercooling is
    small.(i.e. slow cooling of plutonic rocks). Few
    nuclei and high growth rate. Polyhedral (many
    faces) crystals common. Orthoclase phenocrysts in
    granites are prime examples.
  • Pegmatites are extreme examples but due to the
    hydrous character of the melt which increases
    diffusion.
  • Aplites (leuco-micro-granites) form during water
    loss events (pressure quench) which bring on
    strong undercooling by increasing the freezing
    temp.

6
Fine Grained Rocks.
  • Strong undercooling (loss of heat to the cold
    surfaces for lavas and dykes) promotes strong
    nucleation and slow diffusion and growth.
    Polyhedral crystals are commonly formed.
  • Phenocrysts generally form as a result of
    two-stage cooling (slow plutonic stage followed
    by fast volcanic stage). A general increase in
    the undercooling as the magma intrudes up into
    cooler rocks produces a

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Nucleation and growth relative to undercooling
  • For nucleation to occur some degree of
    undercooling is needed. The rate of nucleation
    and growth both rise rapidly with increasing
    undercooling and then fall off. The maximum for
    growth falls off before nucleation.

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DISLOCATIONS
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