Intellectual Merit
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This project allowed for developing a unique direct shear apparatus for direct observation of micromechanical processes at the grain scale in gouge materials. Such capability has the potential to illuminate the processes at the grain scale that are otherwise invisible to traditional characterization techniques. Our measurements of gouge materials have direct implications for the natural faults and the seismic cycle. Our laboratory experiments directly measure the fault strength and its frictional evolution with slip and therefore can contribute to better understanding and interpretation of field data despite the differences in level of applied normal stress, material, temperatures, and time scales over which changes are measured. As identified in SCEC5’s research priority P3.d, determining how fault zone mineralogy governs the stability of slip, interseismic strength recovery and rupture propagation is critically important and this research documented both stable sliding and stick-slip modes of failure for gouge materials as a function of the applied shearing velocity. |
Broader Impacts
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This SCEC project provided funding for training of one graduate student, Amin Gheibi, who is currently conducting his PhD at the Colorado School of Mines on geophysical investigation of friction in granular media. This project also provided an opportunity for a minority student, Sydney Slouka, to join our research team and participate as an undergraduate student researcher in conducting the experiments, analyzing the results, and publishing the work in the form of a conference proceeding. This activity also supported the PhD student’s and PI’s travel to attend SCEC annual meeting in 2017 to continue their interaction with the SCEC community. The direct shear apparatus developed as part of this project has significantly increased the experimental capabilities in our soil and rock mechanics laboratories and now allows us to conduct shear experiments with simultaneous non-destructive monitoring of state of contact between the grains during both compaction and shearing. Due to the presence of gouge materials in faults, the frictional behavior of the fault is dominantly controlled by the gouge and the underlying processes that occur in the gouge materials during shearing are still poorly understood. Thus, there is a critical gap in the knowledge that pertains to the evolution of fault frictional strength and the time-, slip-, and velocity-dependent processes that occur in natural gouge materials and result in different slip modes. The research demonstrated the potential in using ultrasonic technique in illuminating the key microphysical processes occurring in granular gouges. This research effort has important societal implications for seismic hazard assessment and improved fundamental understanding of earthquake processes and nucleation.
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