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JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH,
VOL. 110,
B12407,
doi:10.1029/2005JB003869,
2005
Fusion by earthquake fault friction: Stick or slip?
Yuri Fialko
Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, La
Jolla, California, USA
Yakov Khazan
Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, La
Jolla, California, USA
Abstract
Field observations of pseudotachylites and experimental studies of high-speed friction indicate that melting on a slipping
interface may significantly affect the magnitude of shear stresses resisting slip. We investigate the effects of rock melting
on the dynamic friction using theoretical models of shear heating that couple heat transfer, thermodynamics of phase transitions,
and fluid mechanics. Results of laboratory experiments conducted at high (order of m/s) slip velocities but low (order of
MPa) normal stresses suggest that the onset of frictional melting may give rise to substantial increases in the effective
fault strength, presumably due to viscous effects. However, extrapolation of the modeling results to in situ conditions suggests
that the efficiency of viscous braking is significantly reduced under high normal and shear stresses. When transient increases
in the dynamic fault strength due to fusion are not sufficient to inhibit slip, decreases in the effective melt viscosity
due to shear heating and melting of clasts drastically decrease the dynamic friction, resulting in a nearly complete stress
drop (“thermal runaway”). The amount of energy dissipation associated with the formation of pseudotachylites is governed by
the temperature dependence of melt viscosity and the average clast size in the fault gouge prior to melting. Clasts from a
coarse-grained gouge have lower chances of survival in a pseudotachylite due to a higher likelihood of nonequilibrium overheating.
The maximum temperature and energy dissipation attainable on the fault surface are ultimately limited by either the rock solidus
(via viscous braking, and slip arrest) or liquidus (via thermal runaway and vanishing resistance to sliding). Our modeling
results indicate that the thermally activated fault strengthening and rupture arrest are unlikely to occur in most mafic protoliths
but might be relevant for quartz-rich rocks, especially at shallow (<5–7 km) depths where the driving shear stress is relatively
low.
Received 6
June
2005;
accepted 21
September
2005;
published 23
December
2005.
Index Terms: 7209 Seismology: Earthquake dynamics (1242); 7260 Seismology: Theory; 8004 Structural Geology: Dynamics and mechanics of faulting (8118); 8034 Structural Geology: Rheology and friction of fault zones (8163); 8045 Structural Geology: Role of fluids.
Read Full Article (file size: 414770 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Fialko, Y., and Y. Khazan
(2005),
Fusion by earthquake fault friction: Stick or slip?,
J. Geophys. Res.,
110,
B12407,
doi:10.1029/2005JB003869.
Copyright 2005 by the American Geophysical Union.
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