Ruth Keppler
University of Bonn
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ruth Keppler.
Journal of Applied Crystallography | 2014
Ruth Keppler; Klaus Ullemeyer; Jan H. Behrmann; Michael Stipp
The application of Rietveld texture analysis (RTA) to time-of-flight (TOF) neutron diffraction data allows complex materials with many diffraction peaks to be investigated, for example, rocks composed of different minerals. At the recently upgraded SKAT texture diffractometer at the JINR in Dubna (Russia), which provides three alternative multidetector systems, resolution and accessible range of lattice d spacings can be adapted to sample requirements. In order to infer the optimum experimental setup and the reliability of texture estimates from complicated TOF patterns, the influence of counting statistics and various spectral resolutions on texture deconvolution was investigated. Comparing the results obtained at different resolutions and from different sections of the d patterns indicates that the textures of a four-phase sample can be determined, but using a section at small d spacings with a larger number of peak overlaps leads to smoother textures. A complex seven-phase sample shows orientation differences in addition to the smoothing effect. Weak textures and textures of the minor rock constituents are inaccurate owing to multiple peak overlaps. Consequently, good resolution is essential for RTA on such samples. Grid thinning tests confirmed that no more than 150 diffraction spectra are needed to characterize the texture of a monomineralic sample, and approximately 350 spectra are sufficient for a four-phase sample. The irregular grid point arrangement caused by the SKAT geometry has no negative consequences.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017
Ruth Keppler; Jan H. Behrmann; Michael Stipp
Many blueschists and eclogites are inferred to have formed from oceanic basalts in subducted slabs. Knowledge of their elastic behaviour is essential for reconstructing the internal structure of subduction zones. The Cycladic Blueschist Unit, exposed on Syros Island (Greece), contains rocks belonging to an exhumed Tertiary subduction complex. They were possibly part of a subduction channel, a shear zone above the subducting slab in which exhumation is possible during subduction. Intense plastic deformation, forming crystallographic preferred orientations (CPO), accompanied blueschist and eclogite metamorphism. CPO of the constituent minerals in the collected samples was determined by time-of-flight neutron diffraction. Two samples are foliated fine-grained blueschists with strong CPO, rich in glaucophane, zoisite and phengite. Two coarser-grained eclogite samples rich in omphacite and clinozoisite, or glaucophane, have weaker CPO. Vp and Vs anisotropies were computed from the orientation distribution function and single-crystal elastic constants. All samples show velocity maxima parallel to the mineral lineation, and minima normal to the foliation, providing important constraints on orientations of seismic anisotropy in subduction channels. Vp anisotropies are up to three times higher (6.5-12%) in the blueschists than in the eclogites (3-4%), pointing to a potentially important lithological control of elastic anisotropy in subducted oceanic crust.
Ullemeyer, Klaus, Lokajíček, T., Keppler, Ruth, Vasin, R. N. and Behrmann, Jan H. (2015) Bulk rock elastic moduli at high pressures, derived from the mineral textures and from extrapolated laboratory data IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering, 82 (1). 012093. DOI 10.1088/1757-899X/82/1/012093 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1757-899X/82/1/012093>. | 2015
Klaus Ullemeyer; T. Lokajíček; Ruth Keppler; R. N. Vasin; Jan H. Behrmann
The elastic anisotropy of bulk rock depends on the mineral textures, the crack fabric and external parameters like, e.g., confining pressure. The texture-related contribution to elastic anisotropy can be predicted from the mineral textures, the largely sample-dependent contribution of the other parameters must be determined experimentally. Laboratory measurements of the elastic wave velocities are mostly limited to pressures of the intermediate crust. We describe a method, how the elastic wave velocity trends and, by this means, the elastic constants can be extrapolated to the pressure conditions of the lower crust. The extrapolated elastic constants are compared to the texture-derived ones. Pronounced elastic anisotropy is evident for phyllosilicate minerals, hence, the approach is demonstrated for two phyllosilicate-rich gneisses with approximately identical volume fractions of the phyllosilicates but different texture types.
Tectonophysics | 2015
Ruth Keppler; Klaus Ullemeyer; Jan H. Behrmann; Michael Stipp; Robert Kurzawski; T. Lokajíček
Journal of Structural Geology | 2016
Ruth Keppler; Michael Stipp; Jan H. Behrmann; Klaus Ullemeyer; Florian Heidelbach
Tectonophysics | 2013
Ruth Keppler; F. Rosas; Thorsten J. Nagel
Swiss Journal of Geosciences | 2017
Jacek Kossak-Glowczewski; Nikolaus Froitzheim; Thorsten J. Nagel; Jan Pleuger; Ruth Keppler; Bernd Leiss; Verena Régent
Ore Geology Reviews | 2017
Bidyananda Maibam; Stephen F. Foley; Ambre Luguet; Dorrit E. Jacob; Toijam Bapin Singh; Dwijesh Ray; Dipak Panda; Ruth Keppler
Physics of the Earth and Planetary Interiors | 2018
Klaus Ullemeyer; T. Lokajíček; R. N. Vasin; Ruth Keppler; Jan H. Behrmann
Journal of Structural Geology | 2018
Ruth Keppler