Literature DB >> 31371500

Volumetric and shear processes in crystalline rock approaching faulting.

François Renard1,2,3, Jessica McBeck4,2, Neelima Kandula4,2, Benoît Cordonnier4,2,5, Paul Meakin6, Yehuda Ben-Zion7.   

Abstract

Understanding the approach to faulting in continental rocks is critical for identifying processes leading to fracturing in geomaterials and the preparation process of large earthquakes. In situ dynamic X-ray imaging and digital volume correlation analysis of a crystalline rock core, under a constant confining pressure of 25 MPa, are used to elucidate the initiation, growth, and coalescence of microfractures leading to macroscopic failure as the axial compressive stress is increased. Following an initial elastic deformation, microfractures develop in the solid, and with increasing differential stress, the damage pervades the rock volume. The creation of new microfractures is accompanied by propagation, opening, and closing of existing microfractures, leading to the emergence of damage indices that increase as powers of the differential stress when approaching failure. A strong spatial correlation is observed between microscale zones with large positive and negative volumetric strains, microscale zones with shears of opposite senses, and microscale zones with high volumetric and shear strains. These correlations are attributed to microfracture interactions mediated by the heterogeneous stress field. The rock fails macroscopically as the microfractures coalesce and form a geometrically complex 3D volume that spans the rock sample. At the onset of failure, more than 70% of the damage volume is connected in a large fracture cluster that evolves into a fault zone. In the context of crustal faulting dynamics, these results suggest that evolving rock damage around existing locked or future main faults influences the localization process that culminates in large brittle rupture events.

Entities:  

Keywords:  X-ray tomography; digital volume correlation; earthquake; faulting; strain localization

Year:  2019        PMID: 31371500      PMCID: PMC6697813          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1902994116

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  1 in total

1.  Seismic events miss important kinematically governed grain scale mechanisms during shear failure of porous rock.

Authors:  Alexis Cartwright-Taylor; Maria-Daphne Mangriotis; Ian G Main; Ian B Butler; Florian Fusseis; Martin Ling; Edward Andò; Andrew Curtis; Andrew F Bell; Alyssa Crippen; Roberto E Rizzo; Sina Marti; Derek D V Leung; Oxana V Magdysyuk
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-10-18       Impact factor: 17.694

  1 in total

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