Abstract

AbstractThe strength of fault zones is strongly dependent on pore fluid pressures within them. Moreover, transient changes in pore fluid pressure can lead to a variety of slip behavior from creep to unstable slip manifested as earthquakes or slow slip events. The frictional properties of low‐permeability fault gouge in nature and experiment can be affected by pore fluid pressure development through compaction within the gouge layer, even when the boundaries are drained. Here the conditions under which significant pore fluid pressures develop are analyzed analytically, numerically, and experimentally. Friction experiments on low‐permeability fault gouge at different sliding velocities show progressive weakening as slip rate is increased, indicating that faster experiments are incapable of draining the pore fluid pressure produced by compaction. Experiments are used to constrain the evolution of the permeability and pore volume needed for numerical modeling of pore fluid pressure build up. The numerical results are in good agreement with the experiments, indicating that the principal physical processes have been considered. The model is used to analyze the effect of pore fluid pressure transients on the determination of the frictional properties, illustrating that intrinsic velocity‐strengthening behavior can appear velocity weakening if pore fluid pressure is not given sufficient time to equilibrate. The results illustrate that care must be taken when measuring experimentally the frictional characteristics of low‐permeability fault gouge. The contribution of compaction‐induced pore fluid pressurization leading to weakening of natural faults is considered. Cyclic pressurization of pore fluid within fault gouge during successive earthquakes on larger faults may reset porosity and hence the capacity for compaction weakening.

Highlights

  • Variations in pore fluid pressure within faults profoundly affect their mechanical behavior

  • Transient changes in pore fluid pressure can lead to a variety of slip behavior from creep to unstable slip manifested as earthquakes or slow slip events

  • Experiments are used to constrain the evolution of the permeability and pore volume needed for numerical modeling of pore fluid pressure build up

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Variations in pore fluid pressure within faults profoundly affect their mechanical behavior. The maintenance of elevated pore pressure within faults can lead to long-term weakening by reducing effective normal stress acting on the fault, thereby lowering the shear stress on the fault required to promote sliding (Hubbert & Rubey, 1959). This process has been suggested as a candidate mechanism to explain long-term slip on misoriented “weak” faults such as the San Andreas Fault in California or low-angle normal faults (Byerlee, 1990; Collettini & Sibson, 2001; Faulkner & Rutter, 2001). Recent studies have started to consider the role of fluid pressure, as even small changes in pore fluid pressure from compaction, dilation, or thermal effects will produce first-order changes in the apparent friction coefficient via changes in the effective normal stress that may, or may not, promote instability and earthquake rupture (Bizzarri & Cocco, 2006; Garagash, 2012; Lockner & Byerlee, 1994; Noda & Lapusta, 2010; Samuelson et al, 2009; Segall & Rice, 1995)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call