Abstract

AbstractCarbon dioxide emissions from dolomite decarbonation play an essential role in the weakening of carbonate faults by lowering the effective normal stress, which is thermally activated at temperatures above 600–700 °C. However, the mechanochemical effect of low-crystalline ultrafine fault gouge on the decarbonation and slip behavior of dolomite-bearing faults remains unclear. In this study, we obtained a series of artificial dolomite fault gouges with systematically varying particle sizes and dolomite crystallinities using a high-energy ball mill. The laboratory-scale pulverization of dolomite yielded MgO at temperatures below 50 °C, indicating that mechanical decarbonation without significant heating occurred due to the collapse of the crystalline structure, as revealed by X-ray diffraction and solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance results. Furthermore, the onset temperature of thermal decarbonation decreased to ∼400 °C. Numerical modeling reproduced this two-stage decarbonation, where the pore pressure increased due to low-temperature thermal decarbonation, leading to slip weakening on the fault plane even at 400–500 °C; i.e., 200–300 °C lower than previously reported temperatures. Thus, the presence of small amounts of low-crystalline dolomite in a fault plane may lead to a severely reduced shear strength due to thermal decomposition at ∼400 °C with a small slip weakening distance.

Highlights

  • An understanding of fault weakening during earthquake slip is essential to comprehend the facilitation of rupture propagation

  • Thermal decarbonation may partly occur due to the high local flash temperature during impact, the temperature of the grinding jaw was maintained below 50 °C during grinding

  • The observation that the nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra clearly showed a MgO peak, which was not observed in the X-ray diffraction (XRD) pattern, indicates that MgO had an amorphous phase

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Summary

Introduction

An understanding of fault weakening during earthquake slip is essential to comprehend the facilitation of rupture propagation. Carbonate-bearing faults, wherein the thermal decomposition of carbonate and the resultant CO2 emissions simultaneously affect the frictional strength, merit a quantitative investigation based on mass and energy conservation laws related to pore pressure and temperature, respectively. Mechanical deformation processes, such as pulverization, occur extensively in slip zones (Brantut et al, 2010; Delle Piane et al, 2017; Fondriest et al, 2017), and mechanochemical changes can affect the shear strength of faults (Hirono et al, 2013).

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