Chen Jianye, Verberne B A, Niemeijer A R
State Key Laboratory of Earthquake Dynamics Institute of Geology, China Earthquake Administration Beijing China.
HPT Laboratory, Department of Earth Sciences Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands.
J Geophys Res Solid Earth. 2020 Nov;125(11):e2020JB019970. doi: 10.1029/2020JB019970. Epub 2020 Nov 18.
A (micro)physical understanding of the transition from frictional sliding to plastic or viscous flow has long been a challenge for earthquake cycle modeling. We have conducted ring-shear deformation experiments on layers of simulated calcite fault gouge under conditions close to the frictional-to-viscous transition previously established in this material. Constant velocity () and -stepping tests were performed, at 550°C, employing slip rates covering almost 6 orders of magnitude (0.001-300 μm/s). Steady-state sliding transitioned from (strong) -strengthening, flow-like behavior to -weakening, frictional behavior, at an apparent "critical" velocity ( ) of ~0.1 μm/s. Velocity-stepping tests using < showed "semi-brittle" flow behavior, characterized by high stress sensitivity ("-value") and a transient response resembling classical frictional deformation. For ≥ , gouge deformation is localized in a boundary shear band, while for < , the gouge is well-compacted, displaying a progressively homogeneous structure as the slip rate decreases. Using mechanical data and post-mortem microstructural observations as a basis, we deduced the controlling shear deformation mechanisms and quantitatively reproduced the steady-state shear strength-velocity profile using an existing micromechanical model. The same model also reproduces the observed transient responses to -steps within both the flow-like and frictional deformation regimes. We suggest that the flow-to-friction transition strongly relies on fault (micro)structure and constitutes a net opening of transient microporosity with increasing shear strain rate at < , under normal stress-dependent or "semi-brittle" flow conditions. Our findings shed new insights into the microphysics of earthquake rupture nucleation and dynamic propagation in the brittle-to-ductile transition zone.
长期以来,从摩擦滑动到塑性或粘性流动转变的(微观)物理理解一直是地震循环建模面临的挑战。我们在接近此前在这种材料中确定的摩擦到粘性转变的条件下,对模拟方解石断层泥层进行了环剪变形实验。在550°C下进行了恒速()和步进试验,采用的滑动速率涵盖了近6个数量级(0.001 - 300μm/s)。稳态滑动从(强)强化、类似流动的行为转变为弱化、摩擦行为,在约0.1μm/s的表观“临界”速度()下发生。使用<的速度步进试验显示出“半脆性”流动行为,其特征是高应力敏感性(“值”)和类似于经典摩擦变形的瞬态响应。对于≥,断层泥变形集中在边界剪切带,而对于<,断层泥压实良好,随着滑动速率降低呈现出逐渐均匀的结构。以力学数据和事后微观结构观察为基础,我们推导了控制剪切变形机制,并使用现有的微观力学模型定量再现了稳态剪切强度 - 速度剖面。同一模型还再现了在类似流动和摩擦变形区域内观察到的对步进的瞬态响应。我们认为,从流动到摩擦的转变强烈依赖于断层(微观)结构,并且在低于时,在与正应力相关或“半脆性”流动条件下,随着剪切应变率增加,构成了瞬态微孔的净开放。我们的研究结果为脆性到韧性转变带中地震破裂成核和动态传播的微观物理学提供了新的见解。