实验室水力断裂模拟构造震颤

IF 8.3 Q1 GEOSCIENCES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
AGU Advances Pub Date : 2024-01-29 DOI:10.1029/2023AV001002
C. Yuan, T. Cochard, M. Denolle, J. Gomberg, A. Wech, L. Xiao, D. Weitz
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引用次数: 0

摘要

地球材料的断裂发生在很大的时间和长度范围内。物理条件,尤其是应力场和地球材料特性,可能会影响特定断裂机制下的断裂。在自然界中,快速和慢速断裂同时发生:构造震颤事件的速度快到足以发出地震波,经常伴随着慢速地震发生,而慢速地震的速度太慢,无法发出地震波,被称为无震滑动事件。在本研究中,我们在实验室环境中用加压流体驱动透明样本中的一分钱形裂缝,从而同时产生地震和无震过程。我们利用同步高速成像和高频声发射(AE)传感来观察和聆听发生棍棒断裂不稳定性的裂缝的各种传播(断裂)和停顿(棍棒)序列。快速切向断裂促进了缓慢的径向裂纹扩展。流体粘度和压力可调节慢速和快速事件的断裂动态,并控制事件间时间和单个快速事件中释放的能量。这些 AE 信号与在美国卡斯卡迪亚观测到的偶发性震颤具有相同的行为,其中包括(a) 突发性或间歇性缓慢传播,以及 (b) 辐射能量与面积几乎呈线性比例关系。我们的实验室实验为构造震颤提供了一个合理的模型,表明水力压裂促进了慢地震期间的剪切滑移。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Laboratory Hydrofractures as Analogs to Tectonic Tremors

Laboratory Hydrofractures as Analogs to Tectonic Tremors

The fracture of Earth materials occurs over a wide range of time and length scales. Physical conditions, particularly the stress field and Earth material properties, may condition rupture in a specific fracture regime. In nature, fast and slow fractures occur concurrently: tectonic tremor events are fast enough to emit seismic waves and frequently accompany slow earthquakes, which are too slow to emit seismic waves and are referred to as aseismic slip events. In this study, we generate simultaneous seismic and aseismic processes in a laboratory setting by driving a penny-shaped crack in a transparent sample with pressurized fluid. We leverage synchronized high-speed imaging and high-frequency acoustic emission (AE) sensing to visualize and listen to the various sequences of propagation (breaks) and arrest (sticks) of a fracture undergoing stick-break instabilities. Slow radial crack propagation is facilitated by fast tangential fractures. Fluid viscosity and pressure regulate the fracture dynamics of slow and fast events, and control the inter-event time and the energy released during individual fast events. These AE signals share behaviors with observations of episodic tremors in Cascadia, United States; these include: (a) bursty or intermittent slow propagation, and (b) nearly linear scaling of radiated energy with area. Our laboratory experiments provide a plausible model of tectonic tremor as an indicative of hydraulic fracturing facilitating shear slip during slow earthquakes.

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CiteScore
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