Mechanisms for Pore Fluid Stabilization of Fault Propagation and Slip

Author(s):  
Wen-lu Zhu ◽  
Tiange Xing ◽  
Takamasa Kanaya ◽  
Zachary Zega ◽  
Melodie French

<p>Sudden motions of fault (i.e., fault propagation and slip) cause earthquakes. Understanding the mechanics of earthquakes requires quantitative knowledge of fault propagation and slip instability, which has long been a focus of experimental rock mechanics. In a classic framework based on the elastic rebound theory, the earthquake cycle includes the interseismic period of strain accumulation and the coseismic period of sudden strain release along a tectonic fault.</p><p>Geophysical observations reveal diverse behaviorsof fault motions resulted from strain accumulation and release, from aseismic creep to slow slip events (SSEs) to regular earthquakes. Discovery of SSEs during the interseismic period provides a new means to assess the mechanical states of a seismogenic fault between earthquakes. Most seismic studies link SSEs to high pore fluid pressure. Yet, the mechanical link between slow fault slip and high pore fluid pressure is not well understood. We conduct experimental investigation to elucidate the mechanisms responsible for pore fluid stabilization of fault propagation and slip.</p><p>Our experimental results show that slip events along gouge bearing faults can transform from fast to slow with increasing pore fluid pressures while keeping the effective pressure (i.e., confining pressure minus pore fluid pressure) constant. In these experiments, a layer of fine-grained quartz gouge was placed between the saw-cut surfaces in porous sandstone samples. The saw-cut samples were subject to conventional triaxial loading under a constant effective pressure using various combinations of confining and pore fluid pressures. Different slip events, from dynamic, audible stick-slip to slow, silent  slip, with a range of slip rates and stress drops were produced along the gauge-filled saw-cut surface. These results suggest that on the same fault, varying pore fluid pressure alone could result in a range of fault slip behaviors from dynamic to creep.</p><p>Experimental data further demonstrate that under the same effective pressure, high pore fluid pressure conditions stabilize fault propagation in a wide range of intact rocks including granite, serpentine, and sandstones. In  compact rocks (initial porosity <5%) the stabilization effect can be explained by dilatant hardening. When dilatancy occurs faster than fluid diffusion along a propagating fracture, the resultant increase in effective normal stress impedes further fracture growth. In porous sandstones (initial porosity >10%), however, dilatancy hardening alone could not adequately explain the stable  post-peak fault growth observed at slow loading rates where drained conditions are achieved. Based on the quantitative microstructural analysis of the deformed samples, we propose that the stable fault growth in highly permeable sandstones manifests stable cracking due to stress corrosion. These results elucidate the important controls of pore fluid on rock strength and fault slip beyond the effective stress law. The results provide a mechanic link between the spatially correlated SSEs and high pore fluid pressure conditions.</p>

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Franciscus Aben ◽  
Nicolas Brantut

<p>During shear failure in rock, fracture damage created within the failure zone causes localized dilation, which, under partially drained conditions, results in a localized pore fluid pressure drop. The effective normal stress within the failure zone therefore increases, and with it the fracture and frictional strengths. This effect is known as dilatancy hardening. Dilatancy hardening may suppress rupture propagation and slip rates sufficiently to stabilize the rupture and postpone or prevent dynamic failure. Here, we study the loading conditions at which the rate of dilatancy hardening is sufficiently high to stabilize failure. We do so by measuring the local pore fluid pressure during failure and the rate of dilatancy with slip at a range of confining and pore fluid pressures.</p><p>We performed shear failure experiments on thermally treated intact Westerly granite under triaxial loading conditions. The samples were saturated with water and contained notches to force the location of the shear failure zone. For each experiment, we imposed a different combination of confining pressure and pore fluid pressure, so that the overall effective pressure was either 40 MPa or 80 MPa prior to axial deformation at 10<sup>-6</sup> s<sup>-1</sup> strain rate. Dynamic shear failure was recognized by a sudden audible stress drop, whereas the stress drop during stabilized shear failure took longer and was inaudible. Local pore fluid pressure was measured with in-house developed pressure transducers placed on the trajectory of the prospective failure.</p><p>At effective pressures of 40 MPa and 80 MPa, we observe stabilized failure for a ratio λ (imposed pore fluid pressure over confining pressure) > 0.5. For λ < 0.5, we observe dynamic failure. Of two experiments performed at λ = 0.5 and 80 MPa effective pressure, one showed stabilized failure and one failed dynamically. For λ > 0.5, we observe pore fluid pressure drops in the failure zone of 30-45 MPa for 40 MPa effective pressure, and 60 MPa for 80 MPa confining pressure. The local pore fluid pressure during dynamic failure (λ < 0.5) is 0 MPa, strongly suggesting local fluid vaporization. Of the two experiments at λ = 0.5, the dilation rate with slip is higher for the dynamic failure relative to the stabilized failure.</p><p>We show that with increasing effective pressure, dilatancy hardening increases as the local pore fluid pressure drop during failure becomes larger. For λ < 0.5, dilatancy hardening is insufficient to stabilize failure because the local pore fluid pressure drop is larger than the absolute imposed pore fluid pressure. Near λ = 0.5, small variations in dilatancy control rupture stability. For λ > 0.5, dilatancy hardening is sufficient to suppress dynamic failure.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 73 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kodai Nakagomi ◽  
Toshiko Terakawa ◽  
Satoshi Matsumoto ◽  
Shinichiro Horikawa

An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via the original article.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sreyashi Bhowmick ◽  
Tridib Kumar Mondal

Abstract. Most of the upper crustal fluid flows are strongly influenced by the pre-existing fractures/foliations in the rocks under a certain state of tectonic stress and fluid pressure condition. In the present study, we analyze a wide range of crosscutting fractures that are filled with quartz veins of variable orientations and thicknesses, from the gold bearing massive metabasalts (supracrustal) of the Chitradurga Schist Belt adjacent to the Chitradurga Shear Zone (CSZ), western Dharwar craton, south India. The study involves the following steps: 1) analyzing the internal magnetic fabric using anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility (AMS) studies, and strength of the host metabasalts, 2) quantifying the fluid pressure condition through lower hemisphere equal area projection of pole to veins by determining the driving pressure ratio (R'), stress ratio (ϕ), and susceptibility to fracturing, and 3) deciphering the paleostress condition using fault slip analysis. We interpret that the NNW-SSE to NW-SE (mean 337°/69° NE) oriented magnetic fabric in the rocks of the region developed during regional D1/D2 deformation on account of NE-SW shortening. However, D3 deformation manifested by NW-SE to E-W shortening led to the sinistral movement along CSZ. As a consequence of this sinistral shearing, fractures with prominent orientations formed riedel shear components, with CSZ as the shear boundary. Subsequently, all the pre-existing fabrics along with the riedel shear components were reactivated and vein emplacement took place through episodic fluid pressure fluctuation from high to low Pf at shallow depth (~ 2.4 km). However, NNW-SSE orientations were susceptible for reactivation under both high and low Pf conditions leading to a much greater thickness along the same. The deduced paleostress from fault-slip analysis, along with the kinematics of the fractures and veins are in good agreement with the previously revealed regional tectonics. Thus, integrating multiple domains of studies, help in the logical interpretation of fluid flow condition and vein emplacement mechanism in the study area that has not been ventured before.


2019 ◽  
Vol 767 ◽  
pp. 228168 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melodie E French ◽  
Greg Hirth ◽  
Keishi Okazaki

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