Solid Earth (Feb 2018)

Structural disorder of graphite and implications for graphite thermometry

  • M. Kirilova,
  • V. Toy,
  • J. S. Rooney,
  • C. Giorgetti,
  • K. C. Gordon,
  • C. Collettini,
  • T. Takeshita

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/se-9-223-2018
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
pp. 223 – 231

Abstract

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Graphitization, or the progressive maturation of carbonaceous material, is considered an irreversible process. Thus, the degree of graphite crystallinity, or its structural order, has been calibrated as an indicator of the peak metamorphic temperatures experienced by the host rocks. However, discrepancies between temperatures indicated by graphite crystallinity versus other thermometers have been documented in deformed rocks. To examine the possibility of mechanical modifications of graphite structure and the potential impacts on graphite thermometry, we performed laboratory deformation experiments. We sheared highly crystalline graphite powder at normal stresses of 5 and 25 megapascal (MPa) and aseismic velocities of 1, 10 and 100 µm s−1. The degree of structural order both in the starting and resulting materials was analyzed by Raman microspectroscopy. Our results demonstrate structural disorder of graphite, manifested as changes in the Raman spectra. Microstructural observations show that brittle processes caused the documented mechanical modifications of the aggregate graphite crystallinity. We conclude that the calibrated graphite thermometer is ambiguous in active tectonic settings.