Abstract
Prolonged grinding increases the energy of solids by the production of stored energy in the form of new surfaces and internal defects. Moreover, grinding also generates quasi-hydrostatic pressures which can result in polymorphic transformations and mineral decomposition. Here we demonstrate the solid-state transformation of metastable to stable polymorphs (aragonite → calcite, anatase → rutile); the transformation of low-pressure to high-pressure phases (calcite → aragonite); and the lowering of the dehydration and decarbonation temperatures of minerals (siderite → magnetite or hematite, diaspore → corundum). In the presence of a fluid phase, stored energy from grinding can be released, resulting in accelerated reaction rates and, more importantly, phase transformations. In this paper we demonstrate the following transformations: ground calcite → magnesian calcite (at low Mg 2+ concentration in solution), ground calcite → aragonite (at high Mg 2+ concentration), ground magnesite → hydromagnesite, and ground dolomite → aragonite + Mg 2+. Assuming an analogy between laboratory and natural grinding, tectonic activity may have important consequences on the release of hydrothermal fluids, the solubilization of minerals and on solid-state transformations. As examples the possible role of deformation on the formation of metamorphic aragonite and diaspore-bauxites is discussed.
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