Abstract

Abstract. Phyllosilicates are generally regarded to have a reinforcing effect on chemical compaction by dissolution–precipitation creep (DPC) and thereby influence the evolution of hydraulic rock properties relevant to groundwater resources and geological repositories as well as fossil fuel reservoirs. We conducted oedometric compaction experiments on layered NaCl–biotite samples to test this assumption. In particular, we aim to analyse slow chemical compaction processes in the presence of biotite on the grain scale and determine the effects of chemical and mechanical feedbacks. We used time-resolved (4-D) microtomographic data to capture the dynamic evolution of the porosity in layered NaCl–NaCl/biotite samples over 1619 and 1932 h of compaction. Percolation analysis in combination with advanced digital volume correlation techniques showed that biotite grains influence the dynamic evolution of porosity in the sample by promoting a reduction of porosity in their vicinity. However, the lack of preferential strain localisation around phyllosilicates and a homogeneous distribution of axial shortening across the sample suggests that the porosity reduction is not achieved by pore collapse but by the precipitation of NaCl sourced from outside the NaCl–biotite layer. Our observations invite a renewed discussion of the effect of phyllosilicates on DPC, with a particular emphasis on the length scales of the processes involved. We propose that, in our experiments, the diffusive transport processes invoked in classical theoretical models of DPC are complemented by chemo-mechanical feedbacks that arise on longer length scales. These feedbacks drive NaCl diffusion from the marginal pure NaCl layers into the central NaCl–biotite mixture over distances of several hundred micrometres and several grain diameters. Such a mechanism was first postulated by Merino et al. (1983).

Highlights

  • Controlled compaction influences groundwater resources, geological waste repositories and CO2 sequestration as well as fossil fuel reservoirs

  • One of the major processes involved in chemical compaction in the Earth’s upper crust is dissolution–precipitation creep (DPC), a diagenetic and low-grade metamorphic deformation process that significantly contributes to cementation and the reduction of porosity in sedimentary rocks (Rutter, 1983; Green, 1984; Tada and Siever, 1989; Gratier et al, 2013)

  • In contrast to Macente et al (2018), who emphasise the impact of phyllosilicates upon the evolving porosity, our aim was to qualitatively determine length scales of diffusive transport in a dynamically evolving porosity during dissolution– precipitation creep (DPC) and compare the results to existing transport models

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Summary

Introduction

Controlled compaction influences groundwater resources, geological waste repositories and CO2 sequestration as well as fossil fuel reservoirs. One of the major processes involved in chemical compaction in the Earth’s upper crust is dissolution–precipitation creep (DPC), a diagenetic and low-grade metamorphic deformation process that significantly contributes to cementation and the reduction of porosity in sedimentary rocks (Rutter, 1983; Green, 1984; Tada and Siever, 1989; Gratier et al, 2013). The three successive steps in the sequence are (i) dissolution of material at stressed grain contacts, (ii) diffusive mass transport through an intergranular fluid and (iii) local reprecipitation of dissolved material at low-stress sites (e.g. open pores, veins) (Rutter, 1983; Tada and Siever, 1989; Gratier et al, 2013).

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