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Fault lubrication during earthquakes
- Publication Year :
- 2011
-
Abstract
- A review of about 300 published and unpublished rock friction experiments that reproduce seismic slip conditions suggests that a significant decrease in friction occurs at high slip rate. Extrapolating the experimental data to conditions that are typical of earthquake nucleation depths, the authors conclude that faults are lubricated during earthquakes, irrespective of the fault rock composition or specific weakening mechanism involved. This study reviews a large set of fault friction experiments and finds that a significant decrease in friction occurs at high slip rate. Extrapolating the experimental data to conditions typical of earthquake nucleation depths, it is concluded that faults are lubricated during earthquakes, irrespective of the fault rock composition or specific weakening mechanism involved. The determination of rock friction at seismic slip rates (about 1 m s−1) is of paramount importance in earthquake mechanics, as fault friction controls the stress drop, the mechanical work and the frictional heat generated during slip1. Given the difficulty in determining friction by seismological methods1, elucidating constraints are derived from experimental studies2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9. Here we review a large set of published and unpublished experiments (∼300) performed in rotary shear apparatus at slip rates of 0.1–2.6 m s−1. The experiments indicate a significant decrease in friction (of up to one order of magnitude), which we term fault lubrication, both for cohesive (silicate-built4,5,6, quartz-built3 and carbonate-built7,8) rocks and non-cohesive rocks (clay-rich9, anhydrite, gypsum and dolomite10 gouges) typical of crustal seismogenic sources. The available mechanical work and the associated temperature rise in the slipping zone trigger11,12 a number of physicochemical processes (gelification, decarbonation and dehydration reactions, melting and so on) whose products are responsible for fault lubrication. The similarity between (1) experimental and natural fault products and (2) mechanical work measures resulting from these laboratory experiments and seismological estimates13,14 suggests that it is reasonable to extrapolate experimental data to conditions typical of earthquake nucleation depths (7–15 km). It seems that faults are lubricated during earthquakes, irrespective of the fault rock composition and of the specific weakening mechanism involved.
- Subjects :
- Anhydrite
Multidisciplinary
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
fault lubrication
friction
Nucleation
Mineralogy
Slip (materials science)
friction experiments
010502 geochemistry & geophysics
01 natural sciences
Fault friction
chemistry.chemical_compound
chemistry
Shear (geology)
Lubrication
Geotechnical engineering
Fault mechanics
Slipping
earthquakes
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....9140d09b793c69c9ecf2ac79b9821c40