Lamellar texture and optical anomaly in andradite from the Kamaishi mine, Japan

2013 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manzoor A. Badar ◽  
Shanawer Niaz ◽  
Safdar Hussain ◽  
Mizuhiko Akizuki
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
J. D. Muzzy ◽  
R. D. Hester ◽  
J. L. Hubbard

Polyethylene is one of the most important plastics produced today because of its good physical properties, ease of fabrication and low cost. Studies to improve the properties of polyethylene are leading to an understanding of its crystalline morphology. Polyethylene crystallized by evaporation from dilute solutions consists of thin crystals called lamellae. The polyethylene molecules are parallel to the thickness of the lamellae and are folded since the thickness of the lamellae is much less than the molecular length. This lamellar texture persists in less perfect form in polyethylene crystallized from the melt.Morphological studies of melt crystallized polyethylene have been limited due to the difficulty of isolating the microstructure from the bulk specimen without destroying or deforming it.


1977 ◽  
Vol 14 (11) ◽  
pp. 2578-2592 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. W. Hillhouse

Paleomagnetic evidence indicates that the extensive early Mesozoic basalt field near McCarthy, south-central Alaska, originated far south of its present position relative to North America. Results obtained from the Middle and (or) Upper Triassic Nikolai Greenstone suggest that those basalts originated within 15° of the paleoequator. This position is at least 27° (3000 km) south of the Upper Triassic latitude predicted for McCarthy on the basis of paleomagnetic data from continental North America. The Nikolai pole, as determined from 50 flows sampled at 5 sites, is at 2.2° N, 146.1° E (α95 = 4.8°). The polarity of the pole is ambiguous, because the corresponding magnetic direction has a low inclination and a westerly declination. Therefore, the Nikolai may have originated near 15° N latitude or, alternatively, as far south as 15° S latitude. In addition to being displaced northward, the Nikolai block has been rotated roughly 90° about the vertical axis. A measure of the reliability of this pole is provided by favorable results from the following tests: (1) Within one stratigraphic section, normal and reversed directions from consecutive flows are antipolar. (2) Consistent directions were obtained from sites 30 km apart. (3) Application of the fold test indicated the magnetization was acquired before the rocks were folded. (4) The magnetizations of several pilot specimens are thermally stable up to 550 °C. The stable component is probably carried by magnetite with lamellar texture, a primary feature commonly acquired by a basalt at high temperature during initial cooling of the magma. Geologic and paleomagnetic evidence indicates that the Nikolai is allochthonous to Alaska and that, together with associated formations in southern Alaska and British Columbia, it is part of a now disrupted equatorial terrane.


2015 ◽  
Vol 48 (1) ◽  
pp. 179-188 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Belenkaya ◽  
A. Matvienko ◽  
A. Nemudry

A group-theoretical analysis was carried out to determine the possible orientation states of domains formed as a result of the `perovskite–brownmillerite' phase transition in SrCo0.8Fe0.2O2.5oxide with mixed ion–electron conductivity (MIEC). The results of the theoretical analysis agree with the experimental data obtained in the study of the SrCo0.8Fe0.2O2.5microstructure by means of transmission electron microscopy. Brownmillerite SrCo0.8Fe0.2O2.5(BM) has a lamellar texture composed of 90° twins 60–260 nm in size; the 〈010〉BMand 〈101〉BMdirections are linked through twinning in accordance with the predictions of the group-theoretical analysis. The presence of twins and their switching under mechanical load provide evidence that the perovskite–brownmillerite phase transition in SrCo0.8Fe0.2O2.5is ferroelastic. Comparative analysis of the phenomena observed for ferroelectrics and MIEC oxides indicates their similarity based on the common nature of ferroelectricity and ferroelasticity, and allows us to suppose that nonstoichiometric SrCo0.8Fe0.2O3−δwith compositional disorder may be considered (in terms of its microstructural features) a `relaxor ferroelastic'.


2007 ◽  
Vol 534-536 ◽  
pp. 1057-1060 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rong Tu ◽  
Wenjun Li ◽  
Takashi Goto

The TiC-TiB2-SiC system was a ternary eutectic, whose eutectic composition was 34TiC-22TiB2-44SiC (mol%). A TiC-TiB2-SiC ternary eutectic composite were synthesized via the floating zone method using TiC, TiB2 and SiC powders as starting materials. The TiC-TiB2-SiC eutectic composite showed a lamellar texture. TiC(022), TiB2(010) and SiC(111) of the eutectic composite were perpendicular to the growth direction. The TiC-TiB2-SiC ternary eutectic composite had a specific relationship among the crystal planes: TiC[011]//TiB2[010]//SiC[112], TiC(200)// TiB2(001)//SiC( 402 ) and TiC(111)//TiB2(101)//SiC( 220 ).


2001 ◽  
Vol 15 (06n07) ◽  
pp. 686-694 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. E. FILISKO ◽  
S. HENLEY

Under static conditions, ER suspensions form columns under electric field. However under the combined stimulii of a shear and electric field, the particles assemble into lamellar structures. The morphology of these structures are complex functions of electric field, shear rate, time of shear, electrode gap, particle concentration, and others. In this paper we present information regarding the field dependence, the concentration dependence, and the sequence of application of the electric and shear fields. A alternative model for ER activity, other than chain breaking, is presented which incorporates this lamellar texture.


2007 ◽  
Vol 40 (1) ◽  
pp. 115-120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Wagermaier ◽  
Himadri S. Gupta ◽  
Aurélien Gourrier ◽  
Oskar Paris ◽  
Paul Roschger ◽  
...  

Texture analysis with microbeam scanning diffraction enables the local mapping of three-dimensional crystallite orientation in heterogeneous natural and synthetic materials. Cortical (compact) bone is an example of a hierarchically structured biocomposite, which is built mainly of cylindrical osteons, having a lamellar texture at the micrometre level. In this work, a combination of microbeam synchrotron X-ray texture analysis with thin sections of osteonal bone is used to measure the three-dimensional distribution of thec-axis orientation of the mineral apatite in bone with positional resolution of 1 µm. The data reduction procedure needed to go from the stereographic projection of X-ray intensity to the determination of the local orientation of mineralized collagen fibrils is described. The procedure can be applied to other mineralized tissues (such as trabecular bone and chitin) with micrometre scale and biologically controlled fibrillar texture.


2001 ◽  
Vol 75 (3) ◽  
pp. 658-679 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pascal E. Tschudin

Previous descriptions of Tucetona lack a consistent system using diagnostic characters and only two recent Caribbean ‘species’ are recognized. In this study, textural and structural features of the Tucetona shell are examined and used as the basis for comparison to other glycymerids and in the recognition of morphospecies. Standard diagnostic characters based mainly on the cross-sectional shape of ribs and on hinge teeth ontogeny are presented and used to distinguish six recent Caribbean morphospecies. The shell texture has been examined by light and scanning electron microscopy, showing the interior of glycymerid hinge teeth structured by two bundles of crossed lamellar texture. Whereas European Glycymeris examined for comparison correspond in their hinge plate textures to the one found in Tucetona, differences from a Caribbean Glycymeris sp. are described. Simple lamellar, crossed-lamellar and cone complex crossed-lamellar textures showed the same basic crystallite subunits.


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