
Effect of graphite on the electrical conductivity of the lithospheric mantle
Author(s) -
Zhang Baohua,
Yoshino Takashi
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
geochemistry, geophysics, geosystems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.928
H-Index - 136
ISSN - 1525-2027
DOI - 10.1002/2016gc006530
Subject(s) - olivine , graphite , grain boundary , mantle (geology) , annealing (glass) , materials science , geology , crystallite , peridotite , mineralogy , analytical chemistry (journal) , composite material , metallurgy , geochemistry , microstructure , chemistry , chromatography
Graphite is considered as one of candidate to explain the high‐conductivity anomalies revealed through magnetotelluric (MT) observations. To investigate the effect of interfacial energy on the interconnection of graphite in olivine matrix, we measured the electrical conductivity of polycrystalline San Carlos olivine mixed with 0.8 vol % graphite on the grain boundaries via impedance spectroscopy at 1 GPa and 300–1700 K in a cubic multianvil apparatus. The olivine‐graphite dihedral angle of the recovered sample was also measured to determine interfacial energy between graphite and olivine. The bulk electrical conductivities and large activation enthalpy (∼1.32 eV) of the carbon‐bearing sample were consistent with those of dry polycrystalline olivine. This behavior implies that graphite cannot be interconnected on olivine grain boundaries, which is also supported by the large dihedral angle (98°) of the olivine/graphite system. Impedance spectroscopy measurements were performed at 3 GPa and a temperature of up to 1700 K for carbon‐coated olivine bicrystal samples to investigate the stability of graphite films on the grain boundaries of silicate minerals under upper‐mantle conditions. The conductivities rapidly or slowly dropped as a function of time and graphite film thickness during annealing at the target temperature. This phenomenon exhibits that graphite film on the olivine grain boundary is readily destroyed under upper‐mantle conditions as supported by microstructural observations on the recovered carbon‐coated olivine bicrystal samples. Higher interfacial energy and larger dihedral angle (∼98°) between graphite and olivine would not allow the maintenance of graphite film on olivine grain boundaries. The activation enthalpy for the apparent disconnection rate of a graphite film on olivine grain boundaries is close to that of carbon diffusion in olivine grain boundaries, which suggests that the disconnection of the graphite film is likely to be controlled by carbon grain boundary diffusion. Therefore, graphite is an unlikely candidate to explain the high‐conductivity anomalies revealed by MT surveys in the upper mantle.