Abstract

Phyllosilicates are common constituents of upper crustal faults and subduction forearcs. We studied the effect of mineralogy and controlled effective normal stress (between 5 MPa and 100 MPa) on frictional strength. Although the effect of mineralogy on frictional strength of single-phase phyllosilicate gouges has been previously studied, the influence of effective normal stress has not. We conducted water-saturated and vacuum-dry frictional tests on single-phase phyllosilicate gouges using a triaxial apparatus. Minerals included talc, pyrophyllite, kaolinite, lizardite, illite, montmorillonite, chlorite, muscovite, phlogopite, and biotite (particle size <30 μm). Results show friction coefficients between 0.22 – 0.44 (dry) and 0.12–0.38 (wet). Wet strength is always lower than dry strength for the same phyllosilicate, and those with hydrophilic surfaces are especially weakened by water. Tri-octahedral minerals are weaker than di-octahedral minerals with otherwise similar structures. The dependence of friction on interlayer bond strength is less clear than previously suggested. At effective normal stresses > 20 MPa dry friction coefficients are constant, and wet friction coefficients show a small increase. This is attributed to loss of water and increased contact area. The results indicate that frictional strength of clay-rich faults increases at depths less than ≈1 km under hydrostatic pore fluid pressures.

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