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Frictional slip of granite at hydrothermal conditions

January 1, 1995

To measure the strength, sliding behavior, and friction constitutive properties of faults at hydrothermal conditions, laboratory granite faults containing a layer of granite powder (simulated gouge) were slid. The mechanical results define two regimes. The first regime includes dry granite up to at least 845?? and wet granite below 250??C. In this regime the coefficient of friction is high (?? = 0.7 to 0.8) and depends only modestly on temperature, slip rate, and PH2O. The second regime includes wet granite above ~350??C. In this regime friction decreases considerably with increasing temperature (temperature weakening) and with decreasing slip rate (velocity strengthening). These regimes correspond well to those identified in sliding tests on ultrafine quartz. The results highlight the importance of fluid-assisted deformation processes active in faults at depth and the need for laboratory studies on the roles of additional factors such as fluid chemistry, large displacements, higher concentrations of phyllosilicates, and time-dependent fault healing. -from Authors

Publication Year 1995
Title Frictional slip of granite at hydrothermal conditions
Authors M.L. Blanpied, D. A. Lockner, J. D. Byerlee
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Journal of Geophysical Research
Index ID 70018805
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse