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Cambridge University Press, Journal of Glaciology, 174(51), p. 377-382

DOI: 10.3189/172756505781829287

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The effect of particles on dynamic recrystallization and fabric development of granular ice during creep

Journal article published in 2005 by Min Song ORCID, Ian Baker, David M. Cole
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

AbstractThe mechanical behavior and microstructural evolution of laboratory-prepared, particle-free fresh-water ice and ice with 1 wt.% (~0.43 vol.%) silt-sized particles were investigated under creep with a stress level of 1.45 MPa at −10°C. The particles were present both within the grains and along the grain boundaries. The creep rates of specimens with particles were always higher than those of particle-free ice. Dynamic recrystallization occurred for both sets of specimens, with new grains nucleating along grain boundaries in the early stages of creep. The ice with particles showed a higher nucleation rate. This resulted in a smaller average grain-size for the ice with particles after a given creep strain. Fabric studies indicated that ice with particles showed a more random orientation of c axes after creep to ~10% strain than the particle-free ice.