Projects per year
Abstract
Catastrophic failure in brittle, porous materials initiates when smaller-scale fractures localise along an emergent fault zone in a transition from stable crack growth to dynamic rupture. Due to the rapid nature of this critical transition, the precise micro-mechanisms involved are poorly understood and difficult to image directly. Here, we observe these micro-mechanisms directly by controlling the microcracking rate to slow down the transition in a unique rock deformation experiment that combines acoustic monitoring (sound) with contemporaneous in-situ x-ray imaging (vision) of the microstructure. We find seismic amplitude is not always correlated with local imaged strain; large local strain often occurs with small acoustic emissions, and vice versa. Local strain is predominantly aseismic, explained in part by grain/crack rotation along an emergent shear zone, and the shear fracture energy calculated from local dilation and shear strain on the fault is half of that inferred from the bulk deformation.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 6169 |
Journal | Nature Communications |
Volume | 13 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 18 Oct 2022 |
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Dive into the research topics of 'Seismic events miss important kinematically governed grain scale mechanisms during shear failure of porous rock'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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Catastrophic Failure: what controls precursory damage localisation in rocks?
Main, I., Bell, A., Butler, I., Curtis, A. & Fusseis, F.
1/12/17 → 31/12/21
Project: Research
Equipment
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Experimental Geoscience Facility (EXG)
Ian Butler (Manager)
School of GeosciencesFacility/equipment: Facility
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