Experimental microstylolites in quartz and modelling of natural stylolitic structures
Jean-Pierre Gratier (LGIT), Laurent Muquet (LGIT), Riad Hassani, (LGIT), Francois Renard (LGIT, PGP)

TL;DR
This study combines experimental observations and mechanical modeling to understand the formation and surface roughness of microstylolites in quartz, revealing the interplay of dissolution processes and mechanical properties.
Contribution
It introduces a coupled experimental and modeling approach to explain the complex geometry and self-affine roughness of stylolites at micro scales.
Findings
Microstylolites exhibit self-affine roughness with H of 1.2.
Mechanical modeling reproduces natural stylolite geometries.
Dissolution and mechanical properties jointly influence stylolite development.
Abstract
Experimental microstylolites have been observed at stressed contacts between quartz grains loaded for several weeks in the presence of an aqueous silica solution, at 350 8C and 50 MPa of differential stress. Stereoscopic analysis of pairs of SEM images yielded a digital elevation model of the surface of the microstylolites. Fourier analyses of these microstylolites reveal a self-affine roughness (with a roughness exponent H of 1.2). Coupled with observations of close interactions between dissolution pits and stylolitic peaks, these data illustrate a possible mechanism for stylolite formation. The complex geometry of stylolite surfaces is imposed by the interplay between the development of dissolution peaks in preferential locations (fast dissolution pits) and the mechanical properties of the solid-fluid-solid interfaces. Simple mechanical modeling expresses the crucial competition that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeotechnical and Geomechanical Engineering · Methane Hydrates and Related Phenomena · Mineralogy and Gemology Studies
