The Influence of Confining Pressure and Preexisting Damage on Strain Localization in Fluid‐Saturated Crystalline Rocks in the Upper Crust

Author:

McBeck Jessica1ORCID,Cordonnier Benoît2,Ben‐Zion Yehuda3ORCID,Renard François14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Njord Centre, Departments of Physics and Geosciences University of Oslo Oslo Norway

2. European Synchrotron Radiation Facility Grenoble France

3. Department of Earth Sciences and Southern California Earthquake Center University of Southern California Los Angeles CA USA

4. Université Grenoble Alpes Université Savoie Mont Blanc Université Gustave Eiffel CNRS IRD Grenoble France

Abstract

AbstractThe spatial organization of deformation may provide key information about the timing of catastrophic failure in the brittle regime. In an ideal homogenous system, deformation may continually localize toward macroscopic failure, and so increasing localization unambiguously signals approaching failure. However, recent analyses demonstrate that deformation, including low‐magnitude seismicity, and fractures and strain in triaxial compression experiments, experience temporary phases of delocalization superposed on an overall trend of localization toward large failure events. To constrain the conditions that promote delocalization, we perform a series of X‐ray tomography experiments at varying confining pressures (5–20 MPa) and fluid pressures (0–10 MPa) on Westerly granite cores with varying amounts of preexisting damage. We track the spatial distribution of the strain events with the highest magnitudes of the population within a given time step. The results show that larger confining pressure promotes more dilation, and promotes greater localization of the high strain events approaching macroscopic failure. In contrast, greater amounts of preexisting damage promote delocalization. Importantly, the dilative strain experiences more systematic localization than the shear strain, and so may provide more reliable information about the timing of catastrophic failure than the shear strain.

Funder

Norges Forskningsråd

U.S. National Science Foundation

Horizon Europe European Research Council

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics

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