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Data Publication

Large-scale biaxial experiments on frictionally heterogeneous faults: Mechanical data and selected strain and image data

Buijze, Loes | Guo, Yanshuang

YoDa Data Repository, Utrecht University, Netherlands

(2020)

Frictional heterogeneity within fault zones is one of the factors proposed to explain the spectrum of slow, intermediate, and fast slip behaviors exhibited by faults in nature. Numerical modeling shows how even a simplified model setup incorporating sliding on a velocity-weakening (VW) patch surrounded by velocity-strengthening (VS) material can reproduce a rich variety of slip behaviors resembling nature. However, experimental investigations of sliding on heterogeneous faults are few. In this study, the slip behavior of three, 347 mm long x 50 mm wide, heterogeneous experimental faults, constructed using diagonally sawcut PMMA forcing blocks, was investigated at low normal stresses (<10.5 MPa) and room temperature. Fault friction was controlled by including an 80 mm long, 2 mm thick, central segment of VW gypsum “gouge” flanked by two VS segments composed of calcite, quartz, or kaolinite. The length of the VW segment was of the same order or just below the critical nucleation length for gypsum gouge. Strain gauges and multi-rate digital imaging were used to map stress and displacement along the fault zone. At the highest normal stress the data showed confined ruptures, whereby rupture nucleated in the VW gypsum and was arrested or strongly decelerated in the VS segments. Slip rates on the VW segment were close to dynamic slip rates, but significant slow slip was also observed in the VW segment between rapid events. Lowering the normal stress on the fault, from 10.5 to 1 MPa resulted in slow slip events occurring uniformly over the whole fault (calcitegypsum fault), near-stable sliding on the whole fault (quartzgypsum fault), or persistent stick-slippan> behavior on the VW segment as at higher normal stress (kaolinitegypsum fault). The spectrum of behaviors observed is consistent with that predicted by previous numerical modeling of frictionally heterogeneous faults with a similar geometry as the experiment. The experiments also showed how stress concentrations influence slip behavior. Specifically, normal stress concentrations, formed due to heterogeneous compaction of the kaolinite and VW gypsum gouges, promoted unstable sliding in the latter. Shear stress concentrations at the extremities of the VW segment caused significant slow slip to occur at the extremities of the VW segments, and in the quartzgypsum experiment seemed to promote local slip events at low stresses. The observed fault slippan> behavior was thus controlled by gouge friction and stress distribution, and is consistent with numerical models and theory as applied to both natural and induced seismicity. Contact person: Loes Buijze - Researcher - loes.buijze@tno.nl.

Keywords


Originally assigned keywords
Natural Sciences Earth and related environmental sciences 15
heterogeneous fault friction
rupture nucleation
unstable sliding
slow slip
velocityweakening asperity
biaxial experiment
scaled experiment
confined rupture
Biaxial
Rotary Shear
Triaxial
gypsum
calcite
quartz
kaolin
Friction
Strain gauge
Photography
EPOS
multiscale laboratories
rock and melt physical properties

Corresponding MSL vocabulary keywords
slip weakening parameters
biaxial compression apparatus
rotary shear apparatus
rotary shear apparatus
gypsum
calcite
quartz
friction coefficient
frictional deformation
friction coefficient

MSL enriched keywords
Measured property
friction - controlled slip rate
slip weakening parameters
Apparatus
deformation testing
compression testing
biaxial compression apparatus
shear testing
rotary shear apparatus
Apparatus
characterization of modelling material
frictional property determination
rotary shear apparatus
minerals
sulfate minerals
gypsum
carbonate minerals
calcite
silicate minerals
tectosilicates
quartz
friction coefficient
Inferred deformation behavior
deformation behaviour
frictional deformation
Measured property
friction - controlled slip rate
friction coefficient
strain
strain
phyllosilicates
clay - kaolinite
kaolinite
conventional triaxial apparatus: saw-cut
rate and state friction (RSF) parameters
rate and state friction (RSF) parameters
tectonic deformation structure
tectonic fault
antropogenic setting
Induced seismicity
induced seismicity

MSL original sub domains

rock and melt physics

MSL enriched sub domains i

rock and melt physics
analogue modelling of geologic processes


Source publisher

YoDa Data Repository, Utrecht University, Netherlands


DOI

10.24416/UU01-2RECP2


Authors

Buijze, Loes

0000-0001-7749-8706

Utrecht University; TNO;

Guo, Yanshuang

0000-0001-6645-4011

Institute of Geology, China Earthquake Administration, Beijing, China;


Contributers

Buijze, Loes

DataCollector

0000-0001-7749-8706

Utrecht University; TNO;

Buijze, Loes

ContactPerson

0000-0001-7749-8706

Utrecht University; TNO;

Guo, Yanshuang

DataCollector

0000-0001-6645-4011

Institute of Geology, China Earthquake Administration, Beijing, China;

Guo, Yanshuang

Researcher

0000-0001-6645-4011

Institute of Geology, China Earthquake Administration, Beijing, China;

Niemeijer, André Rik

Researcher

0000-0003-3983-9308

Utrecht University;

Ma, Shengli

Researcher

0000-0002-5964-5458

Institute of Geology, China Earthquake Administration, Beijing, China;

Spiers, Christopher James

Supervisor

0000-0002-3436-8941

Utrecht University;

Experimental rock deformation/HPT-Lab (Utrecht University, The Netherlands)

HostingInstitution

Utrecht University;

Key Laboratory of Earthquake Dynamics, State

HostingInstitution

China Earthquake Administration, Beijing, China;


References

Buijze, L., Guo, Y., Niemeijer, A. R., Ma, S., & Spiers, C. J. (2020). Nucleation of Stick‐Slip Instability Within a Large‐Scale Experimental Fault: Effects of Stress Heterogeneities Due to Loading and Gouge Layer Compaction. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 125(8). Portico. https://doi.org/10.1029/2019jb018429

10.1029/2019JB018429

References

Thielicke, W., & Stamhuis, E. J. (2014). PIVlab – Towards User-friendly, Affordable and Accurate Digital Particle Image Velocimetry in MATLAB. Journal of Open Research Software, 2. https://doi.org/10.5334/jors.bl

10.5334/jors.bl

References

Zhuo, Y., Liu, P., Chen, S., Guo, Y., & Ma, J. (2018). Laboratory Observations of Tremor‐Like Events Generated During Preslip. Geophysical Research Letters, 45(14), 6926–6934. Portico. https://doi.org/10.1029/2018gl079201

10.1029/2018GL079201

References


Contact

Key Laboratory of Earthquake Dynamics, State

China Earthquake Administration, Beijing, China;


Citiation

Buijze, L., & Guo, Y. (2020). Large-scale biaxial experiments on frictionally heterogeneous faults: Mechanical data and selected strain and image data. Utrecht University. https://doi.org/10.24416/UU01-2RECP2