Jiang, W.-T., Peacor, D.R., Árkai, P., Tóth, M., Kim,
J.W. (1997): TEM and XRD determination of crystallite size and lattice
strain as a function of illite crystallinity in pelitic rocks. - J. metamorphic
Geol., 15, 267-281.
Abstract:
Average crystallite size and mean-square strain of illite in rock specimens
and clay separates were measured independently in TEM images and by single-line
Fourier (Voigt method) profile analysis of the c. 1 nm peak of XRD patterns
for a prograde sequence of pelitic rocks (illite crystallinity indices=0.17-0.58
degrees Delta 2 theta) from the Gaspe Peninsula, Quebec. The TEM-determined
crystallite sizes in clay separates approximate those determined by Fourier
profile analyses and those calculated from illite crystallinity indices
by the Scherrer equation, with the exception of the diagenetic sample.
The crystallite sizes and mean-square strains of illite in rock samples
exhibit a trend similar to that determined by profile analyses, but the
average crystallite sizes are up to five times larger than those measured
for clay separates. TEM images show that all rock samples have a wide range
of crystallite sizes, and the proportions of larger crystallites increase
with metamorphic grade. The diagenetic illite is defect-rich, fine-grained
(mean thickness by volume = c. 70 nm), 1 M(d) material. Anchizonal illite
tends to occur as separate aggregates of small 1 M(d) and larger 2 M(1)
crystals (c. 200 nm), comprising arrays of subparallel coalescing packets.
The epizone sample has thick (c. 400 nm), defect-free crystals of muscovite
occurring in stacks of parallel layers, or subhedral crystals intergrown
with large-angle boundaries. Cleaved crystals that are free of intracrystalline
layer terminations are dominant in clay separates of all samples, having
ranges of smaller sizes with volume-average thicknesses of c. 43, 43, and
81 nm (c. 14, 28, 67 nm by the Voigt method), respectively, for the three
zones. The results suggest that illite crystallinity indices do not provide
a direct measure of a single microstructural state of illite in rocks,
although they yield consistent limits for average crystallite sizes for
the anchizone (23 & 48 nm here). Therefore, they serve as a general
parameter of the degree of recrystallization on a relative basis, in part
because the contributions of all peak-broadening variables (mixed layering,
size and strain) decrease regularly with prograde regional metamorphism
of pelites. The microstructural changes caused by rock disaggregation are
probably a function of those variables as well. The data collectively demonstrate
a trend from metastable, defect-rich, small crystals towards a stable assemblage
of larger, defect-free crystals, through dissolution of strained crystals
and neocrystallization, consistent with the Ostwald step rule.
Author Keywords:
crystallite size, illite crystallinity, lattice strain, TEM, XRD
KeyWords Plus:
TRANSMISSION ELECTRON-MICROSCOPE, LOW-GRADE METAMORPHISM, GASPE-PENINSULA,
QUEBEC, APPALACHIANS, SLATE TRANSITION, VOIGT FUNCTION, NORTH-WALES, LEHIGH
GAP, DIFFRACTION, DIAGENESIS