scholarly journals The influence of the brittle-ductile transition zone on aftershock and foreshock occurrence

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Giuseppe Petrillo ◽  
Eugenio Lippiello ◽  
François P. Landes ◽  
Alberto Rosso
Author(s):  
M. Reytier ◽  
S. Chapuliot ◽  
M. Ne´de´lec

In order to study the effects of a sudden cooling in a thick hot structure, such as the vessel of a pressurised water reactor, a specially-adapted compact tension specimen has been developed. It consists of a CT50 (2T-CT specimen) with holes through the specimen to cool the crack tip locally by liquid nitrogen. Therefore, this new test allows to study in details different loading-temperature histories near the brittle/ductile transition zone which may put the classical crack intiation criteria in the wrong. First, this article describes in details two tests for which a cleavage rupture has been obtained during the thermal shock on this 16MND5 steel. Either the Crack Mouth Opening Displacement was maintained during the test or the applied load. Then, numerical calculations have been realised in order to estimate the local mechanical fields at the crack tip and to evaluate the global fracture mechanics parameters. Thanks to these tests and these thermal and mechanical simulations, a work is done on rupture criteria under thermal shocks by using either the “Master Curve” approach or the Beremin model.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Matthew Joseph Comeau ◽  
Michael Becken ◽  
James A. D. Connolly ◽  
Alexander Grayver ◽  
Alexey V. Kuvshinov ◽  
...  

<p>We investigate how a conceptual hydrodynamic model consisting of fluid localization and stagnation by thermally activated compaction can explain low-resistivity anomalies observed in the lower crust (>20 km depth). Electrical resistivity models, derived from magnetotelluric data collected across the intracontinental Bulnay region, a subset of a larger regional array across central Mongolia, are generated. They reveal low-resistivity (3 - 30 Ωm) domains with a width of ~25 km and a vertical extent of <10 km in the lower crust, with their tops ~5 km below the brittle-ductile transition zone. In 3-D these features appear as laterally extended (tube-like) structures, 300 km long, rather than disconnected ellipsoids. The features are oriented parallel to the adjacent Bulnay fault zone segments and perpendicular to the far-field compressive tectonic stress (i.e., northward motion from China and Tibet). These low-resistivity domains are consistent with the presence of saline metamorphic fluids. Deeper features imaged with the data include a large upper mantle conductor that we attribute to an asthenospheric upwelling, and thin lithosphere, related to intraplate surface uplift and volcanism, in agreement with recent geodynamic modelling of lithospheric removal in this region.</p><p>Based on the observed thermal structure of the crust, and assuming the mean stress at the brittle-ductile transition is twice the vertical load, the hydrodynamic model predicts that fluids would collect in zones <9 km below the brittle-ductile transition zone, and the zones would have a vertical extent of ~9 km, both in agreement with the resistivity models across the Bulnay region. The hydrodynamic model also gives plausible values for the activation energy for viscous creep (270 - 360 kJ/mol), suggesting that the mechanism is dislocation creep.</p><p>From the electrical resistivity models, the lower crustal viscous compaction-length is constrained to be ~25 km - in this region. Within the conceptual model, this length-scale is entirely consistent with independent estimates for the specific hydraulic and rheological properties of this region. In fact, this can be used to independently constrain acceptable ranges for the lower crustal effective viscosity, which is found to be low (on the order of 10^18 Pas). Accordingly, the results indicate that low-salinity fluids (likely 1 - 0.01 wt% NaCl), and correspondingly low porosities (likely 5 - 0.1 vol%), are the most plausible. These key findings suggest partial melts are not favoured to explain the anomalies. Overall, the results of this contribution imply that it is tectonic and compaction processes that control lower crustal fluid flow, rather than lithological or structural heterogeneity.</p>


1985 ◽  
Vol 122 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur P. S. Reymer

AbstractStructural, petrographic and chemical analyses of a set of northeast-trending quartzofeld-spathic dykes in Wadi Kid area (southeastern Sinai) show that they are the product of anatexis of pelitic rocks. Metamorphic P-T data indicate that anatexis could have occurred only 2 km below the present erosion level. The partial melts intruded into overlying rocks during regional metamorphism along a set of northeast-oriented extensional fractures, thereby recrystallizing and in some cases obtaining tectonite fabrics. The fractures were formed perpendicular to the regional mineral lineation and show that the area was within the deeper parts of the brittle–ductile transition zone. The original depth of the presently exposed crustal level corresponds well with the theoretical and experimentally derived depths of the brittle-ductile transition zone in high heat flow regimes. The emplacement of a granitoid pluton or gneiss dome, possibly of dioritic composition, could be responsible for both melting and tensile fracturing of the overlying rocks.


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