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   Interpreting seismic velocity

The effect of composition, temperature, and pressure on the elasticity of olivine and garnet:
Implications for interpreting seismic velocity variations in the mantle

 

Akira Yoneda1, Ganglin Chen2, Hartmut A. Spetzler3, and Ivan C. Getting4

 

1Inst. for Study of the Earth's Interior, Okayama Univ., Misasa, Tottori 682-0193, Japan; yoneda@misasa.okayama-u.ac.jp

2ExxonMobil Upstream Research Company, Houston, Texas, U.S.A.; ganglin.chen@exxonmobil.com

3Emeritus Professor/Fellow, Geological Sciences/CIRES, Univ. Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, Colorado, U.S.A.; hartmut.spetzler@Colorado.EDU

4Senior Research Associate Emeritus, CIRES, Univ. Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, Colorado, U.S.A.; Getting@Colorado.EDU

 

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Abstract

Composition, temperature, and pressure are all factors that can affect seismic velocity in the mantle. Laboratory elasticity data show that a decrease of 1% in the Mg/(Mg+Fe) ratio in olivine reduces the velocity by an amount equivalent to that caused by a temperature increase of 70 K. The compositional effect of pyrope-almandine garnet on seismic velocity is similar to that of olivine, though slightly smaller. If the upper mantle is composed mainly of olivine, and if the relationships obtained from laboratory measurements between elasticity, temperature, and composition hold at the P-T conditions appropriate to the mantle, then variations of only 1-2% in the Mg/(Mg+Fe) content of olivine can account for all the observed variation in dlnVp in the mantle. Other factors such as temperature may also vary, but such effects may not be required to explain observed velocity variations.

 

Introduction

Seismic velocity profiles of the mantle enable Earth scientists to probe mantle structure. Potential mantle plume locations are of particular interest. Technological advances in seismic hardware and software have led to a proliferation of models and interpretations related to mantle heterogeneity, anisotropy, and anelasticity. However, as Don L. Anderson pointed out elegantly in his article “Is there convincing tomographic evidence for whole mantle convection”, it is not safe to simply assume that seismic tomography is a mantle thermometer. In fact, composition, temperature, and pressure are just some of the factors that can contribute to seismic velocity variations. To facilitate the interpretation of global seismological data, precise elasticity data for mantle minerals are needed. In this short article, we review some measurements of the elasticity of mantle minerals with relevant background material that we hope may stimulate further interest and discussion of this topic.

Several factors affect acoustic and elasticity data acquired in the laboratory, including composition, temperature, pressure, wave frequency, and mineral texture. These are also the parameters that affect seismic velocities in the mantle. Experimentalists can design controlled experiments to separate the effect of one parameter from the others. The laboratory techniques to measure elasticity of minerals include Brillouin Light Scattering (BLS; Weidner et al., 1982), Impulsive Stimulated Light Scattering (ISLS; e.g., Crowhurst, 2006), GHz Ultrasonic Interferometry (GUI; Spetzler et al., 1993), Multi-anvil Ultrasonics (Liebermann et al., 1998), Inelastic X-ray Scattering (IXS; e.g., Fukui et al., 2008), and high-frequency extension of Resonant Ultrasound Spectroscopy (RUS; Yoneda et al., 2007). BLS was introduced by Weidner et al. (1982) to measure single crystal Stishovite and has been used for elasticity measurements at pressures above 100 GPa in diamond anvil cells (DAC; e.g., Murakami et al., 2007a;b). A recent study by Mao et al. (2008) shows that 1 wt% of H2O in wadsleite decreases bulk modulus and rigidity by ~10 %.

A fundamental disadvantage of BLS is that it is not suitable for measurements on opaque minerals such as some mantle minerals that contain substantial amounts of divalent iron (Fe+2). To overcome this problem, ISLS was introduced (e.g., Crowhurst, 2006). ISLS can be used even in the case of metal samples. Another experimental challenge for BLS and ISLS is to conduct high pressure measurements in DAC in which the P-mode (compressional wave) scattered peaks from the sample tend to overlap with the S-mode (shear wave) from the diamond anvil.

To overcome these difficulties, GUI was developed. The innovative GUI instrumentation is based on the rapid progress in digital oscilloscope technology in the early 1990s (Spetzler et al., 1993). The unprecedented high-precision acoustic velocity data (to 1 part in 10-6) on minerals of sub-millimeter sizes obtained by GUI opened up new opportunities for mantle mineral elasticity studies. Measurements were made of selected elastic moduli of some mantle minerals to illustrate the effect of temperature, composition, and simultaneous pressure and temperature (Chen et al., 1996a, 1996b; Chen et al., 1997).

Results and Discussion

Figure 1 (Figure 5 from Chen et al., 1996a, reproduced) summarizes the GUI measurement results of the compositional dependence of the temperature derivatives for two selected elastic moduli in the forsterite-fayalite olivine solid solution series and the pyrope-almandine garnet solid solution series. The results show that the temperature derivatives of the elastic moduli of olivine and garnet decrease systematically with decrease in the Mg/(Mg+Fe) ratio. Furthermore, the results indicate the trade-off effect of composition and temperature on the elasticity or acoustic velocities of these mantle minerals. For example, a decrease of 1% in Mg/(Mg+Fe) ratio in olivine reduces the velocity by an amount equivalent to that caused by a temperature increase of 70 K.

Figure 1 : Summary of the temperature derivatives for olivine ∂lnC22/∂T and garnet ∂ln[C44+(C11-C12)/2]/∂T. Note the 1% error bar in this figure (Figure is reproduction of Figure 5 in Chen et al., 1996a).

 

Seismic tomography shows that the lateral variation of seismic velocity in the upper mantle is about 0.5% for dlnVp within a single tectonic region (e.g., Pulliam et al., 1993). Such lateral velocity variation has been attributed to lateral temperature variations in the upper mantle. If the upper mantle is composed mainly of olivine, and if the relationships obtained from our laboratory measurements between elasticity, temperature, and composition hold at the P-T conditions appropriate to the mantle, then the observed variation in dlnVp can be accounted for by only 1-2% variation in the Mg/(Mg+Fe) content of olivine. The composition of San Carlos olivine has been found to range from 89% to 92.7% (Isaak, 1992). Such a variation may originate from compositional inhomogeneities in the sources of these olivines in the upper mantle.

It is possible that both temperature and composition vary in the upper mantle and contribute to observed lateral seismic velocity variations. If we had information on lateral density variations from regions that exhibit lateral seismic velocity variation, we would be able to constrain whether the observed seismic velocity variations originated in temperature variations or in compositional variations. If the Fe content causes lateral seismic velocity variation in the upper mantle, then low-velocity regions will be denser than high-velocity regions. The relationship is the opposite if temperature variations cause low velocities–then hot, low-velocity regions will be less dense than cold, high-velocity regions. Consequently the resultant mantle convection scheme, whether bodies sink, float, or rise, will be quite different. Trampert et al. (2004) showed that there are regions in the mantle where low velocities characterize high-density regions, not high-temperature regions (i.e., the ‘superplumes’).

In a continuation of this laboratory measurement work, Chen et al. (1997) were able to complete the measurements of the elasticity systematics for the pyrope-almandine solid solution series using GUI as a result of H. Spetzler’s persistent and successful effort to develop the technique to achieve shear wave measurements at GHz frequencies. The effect of the Mg/(Mg+Fe) ratio on the elasticity of pyrope-almandine series samples was shown to be comparable to olivine in magnitude, albeit smaller. A 10% decrease in Mg/(Mg+Fe) reduces the acoustic velocity in pyrope-almandine by about 1% vs. a 3% reduction in Vp[010] for olivine. The high precision of the GUI data also allows measurement of the mixed pressure and temperature derivatives of olivine (Chen et al., 1996a). The results indicate that the cross pressure and temperature dependence of the acoustic velocities of olivine may need to be considered when interpreting seismic velocity data in terms of mantle structure. The temperature dependences of the elastic constants for three important mantle minerals: β-spinel, γ-spinel, and perovskite (Aizawa, 2004; Mayama, 2004, 2005) became available as a result of the effort led by Akira Yoneda.

The magnitude of the mixed pressure and temperature derivatives of sound velocities and elastic moduli of mantle minerals can also affect interpretations in terms of of mantle structure, e.g., Karki et al. (1999). Chen et al. (1996b) used the high precision offered by GUI to measure selected mixed pressure and temperature derivatives for olivine (Figure 2). Gwanmesia et al. (2006) reported the results on synthetic pyrope garnets by combining gas- and solid-pressure medium data. The magnitude of the mixed derivatives for these mantle minerals is of the order of 10-3 to 10-4. As a result, the pressure dependence of elasticity determined at ambient or close-to-ambient temperature must be corrected for the temperature effect in order to apply to mantle conditions. The same is true for the temperature dependence of elasticity determined at ambient or close-to-ambient pressure. Because the mixed derivatives are so small, extremely high precision elasticity data are needed.

Figure 2 : Temperature derivative of C22 for San Carlos olivine vs. pressure with a lapped contact. The straight line is a linear fit. The uncertainties in the temperature derivatives are a maximum of about 2% and result from the propagation the uncertainties in the travel-time and the temperature data (Figure is reproduction of Figure 3 in Chen et al., 1996b ).

 

The continuing demand for high precision elasticity data suitable for interpreting seismic velocity profiles of the mantle stimulated further GUI instrumentation to be developed for use at high pressures (Jacobsen et al., 2002; 2004; Kantor, 2004). Other innovative methods were also developed such as RUS (Maynard, 1996; Yoneda et al., 2007), IXS (e.g., Antonangeli et. al., 2005; Fiquet et. al., 2009), and ultrasonics in multi-anvil cells for single crystals (Chen et al., 1998). Measurement capability has now been extended to lower-mantle pressures (Murakami et al., 2007a;b, 2009a, 2009b). Single crystal wadsleyite has successfully been grown (Shatskiy et al., 2009). These developments have provided, and will continue to provide, important constraints on seismic data interpretations aimed at understanding the mantle. Table 1 compares some of the measurement techniques used for single-crystal mantle minerals.

 

Table 1. Comparison of elasticity measurement techniques that are useful for single-crystal mantle minerals.

Technique

Frequency range

Sample size (μ)

Sample property

Number of specimens

Sample preparation

IXS

~1 THz

a few tens

none

1

none

BLS

~10 GHz

a few tens

transparent

1

none

ISLS

~10 GHz

a few tens

transparent*

1

none

GUI

~1 GHz

a few hundreds

none

a few

polish both ends

HRUS

~10 MHz

a few hundreds

none

1

form to a typical shape**

* Transparency is not needed for Stonely wave excitation. However elastic properties of the liquid medium is required for the analysis.
** (HRUS–High-frequency Resonant Ultrasound Scattering). In the case of a spherical shape, determining the crystallographic orientation can be omitted.

 

We conclude by emphasizing that there are two major subjects that must be bourn in mind when laboratory elasticity data on single crystals of mantle minerals are applied to interpretations of global seismic velocity data–the textural effect (anisotropy), and the frequency effect (velocity dispersion). We refer to the excellent papers on these subjects by Getting et al. (1997), Jackson et al. (2002, 2004), Mavko et al. (2009), Karato (1993), and Karato & Karki (2001).

 

References

 


Comments & discussion

3rd September, 2009
Andy Moore (African Queen Mines Ltd., Botswana & Dept. Geology, Rhodes University, South Africa)

This webpage underlines all of my prejudices about geophysical modeling. If you look at the results of the seismic array across the Kaapvaal-Zimbabwe cratons, with one of the best (highest density) array of receiver stations, most of the P and S wave velocity anomalies show a variation of ± 0.5%, but the papers presenting these data do not specify the 2-sigma errors on these estimates, which are based on a variety of poorly constrained variables. No geochemist would be allowed to get away with such liberties in data presentation–or shouldn’t.

last updated 3rd September, 2009

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