Abstract

New insights into the pressure and temperature conditions on fault surfaces during seismic slip are provided by Raman-active vibrational modes of SiO2 glass. We performed triaxial stick-slip experiments at room temperature and high normal stresses on pre-ground, high-purity silica glass surfaces. During slip, velocities exceed 0.32 ms−1 over durations of less than one millisecond, generating frictional heat and locally melting the fault surfaces. Temperature increases permit structural rearrangement within the melt; these changes are preserved by rapid quenching. Using Raman spectroscopy, we analyse melt-welded regions and show that these areas exhibit systematic changes in the spectra of silica. Changes result from a decrease in the inter-tetrahedral Si-O-Si bond angle and are correlated to increasing silica glass density in the slip regions. Densification results from both rapid cooling rates and exposure to very high pressures at asperity contacts. We use data from other experiments to calibrate these effects, estimating quench temperatures up to 1800 K and pressures of ∼180 MPa. These results provide the first quantitative evidence for the effects of quench rates and high inter-asperity pressures on the physics of melting and quenching during seismic slip and its impact on fault behaviour.

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