Holness, M. 2010. Decoding dihedral angles in melt-bearing and solidified rocks. In: (Ed.) M.A. Forster, and John D. Fitz Gerald, The Science of Microstructure - Part I, Journal of the Virtual Explorer, Electronic Edition, ISSN 1441-8142, volume 35, paper 2, doi:10.3809/jvirtex.2011.00265
Decoding dihedral angles in melt-bearing and solidified rocks
Abstract
The dihedral angle is the angle subtended between two grain boundaries at a three-grain junction, or the angle between the two liquid-solid interfaces at the corner of a fluid-filled pore. In textural equilibrium the dihedral angle defines the topology, interconnectivity and amount of a liquid phase. Complete textural equilibrium (in terms of uniform grain size, constant mean curvature of grain boundaries and balancing of interfacial energies at all three- and four-grain junctions) is rare in geological materials, particularly in the crust. Local equilibrium at grain junctions (manifest as dihedral angles) is generally seen in monomineralic rocks, in high-grade metamorphic rocks and in the mantle. The distribution of true dihedral angles, as measured using a universal stage, has great potential use in interpretation of rock history. The studies of disequilibrium dihedral angles are currently at the descriptive stage, and further efforts need to be applied to deriving a quantitative understanding of the processes by which, and rates at which, they attain equilibrium.
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Textural Equilibrium
- How To Measure Dihedral Angles
- Dihedral Angles in Texturally Equilibrated Rocks
- Dihedral Angles in Non-Equilibrated Rocks
- Textural Equilibration
- Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References