Lamur Anthony, Kendrick Jackie E, Schaefer Lauren N, Lavallée Yan, Kennedy Ben M
Department of Earth, Ocean and Ecological Sciences, University of Liverpool, 4 Brownlow Street, Liverpool, L69 3GP, UK.
Department for Earth and Environmental Sciences, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Theresienstraße, 41/III, 80333, Munich, Germany.
Sci Rep. 2023 Jan 23;13(1):1271. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-26721-x.
Cycles of stress build-up and release are inherent to tectonically active planets. Such stress oscillations impart strain and damage, prompting mechanically loaded rocks and materials to fail. Here, we investigate, under uniaxial conditions, damage accumulation and weakening caused by time-dependent creep (at 60, 65, and 70% of the rocks' expected failure stress) and repeating stress oscillations (of ± 2.5, 5.0 or 7.5% of the creep load), simulating earthquakes at a shaking frequency of ~ 1.3 Hz in volcanic rocks. The results show that stress oscillations impart more damage than constant loads, occasionally prompting sample failure. The magnitudes of the creep stresses and stress oscillations correlate with the mechanical responses of our porphyritic andesites, implicating progressive microcracking as the cause of permanent inelastic strain. Microstructural investigation reveals longer fractures and higher fracture density in the post-experimental rock. We deconvolve the inelastic strain signal caused by creep deformation to quantify the amount of damage imparted by each individual oscillation event, showing that the magnitude of strain is generally largest with the first few oscillations; in instances where pre-existing damage and/or the oscillations' amplitude favour the coalescence of micro-cracks towards system scale failure, the strain signal recorded shows a sharp increase as the number of oscillations increases, regardless of the creep condition. We conclude that repetitive stress oscillations during earthquakes can amplify the amount of damage in otherwise mechanically loaded materials, thus accentuating their weakening, a process that may affect natural or engineered structures. We specifically discuss volcanic scenarios without wholesale failure, where stress oscillations may generate damage, which could, for example, alter pore fluid pathways, modify stress distribution and affect future vulnerability to rupture and associated hazards.
应力积累和释放的循环是构造活动活跃的行星所固有的。这种应力振荡会产生应变和损伤,促使承受机械载荷的岩石和材料发生破坏。在此,我们在单轴条件下研究了由时间依赖性蠕变(在岩石预期破坏应力的60%、65%和70%下)以及重复应力振荡(蠕变载荷的±2.5%、5.0%或7.5%)引起的损伤积累和弱化,模拟了火山岩中约1.3赫兹振动频率的地震。结果表明,应力振荡比恒定载荷造成的损伤更大,偶尔会促使样品破坏。蠕变应力和应力振荡的幅度与我们的斑状安山岩的力学响应相关,这意味着渐进性微裂纹是永久非弹性应变的原因。微观结构研究揭示了实验后岩石中更长的裂缝和更高的裂缝密度。我们对由蠕变变形引起的非弹性应变信号进行反褶积,以量化每个单独振荡事件造成的损伤量,结果表明应变幅度通常在前几次振荡时最大;在先前存在的损伤和/或振荡幅度有利于微裂纹向系统规模破坏合并的情况下,记录的应变信号会随着振荡次数的增加而急剧增加,无论蠕变条件如何。我们得出结论,地震期间的重复应力振荡会放大原本承受机械载荷的材料中的损伤量,从而加剧其弱化,这一过程可能会影响天然或工程结构。我们特别讨论了没有整体破坏的火山场景,在这种情况下,应力振荡可能会产生损伤,例如,这可能会改变孔隙流体路径、改变应力分布并影响未来对破裂及相关灾害的脆弱性。