Friction of Shear-Fracture Zones

A shear fracture of brittle solids under compression undergoes a substantial evolution from the initial microcracking to a fully formed powder-filled shear zone. Experiments covering the entire process are relatively easy to conduct, but they are very difficult to investigate in detail. Numerically,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical review letters 2017-12, Vol.119 (25), p.255501-255501, Article 255501
Hauptverfasser: Riikilä, T I, Pylväinen, J I, Åström, J
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A shear fracture of brittle solids under compression undergoes a substantial evolution from the initial microcracking to a fully formed powder-filled shear zone. Experiments covering the entire process are relatively easy to conduct, but they are very difficult to investigate in detail. Numerically, the large strain limit has remained a challenge. An efficient simulation model and a custom-made experimental device are employed to test to what extent a shear fracture alone is sufficient to drive material to spontaneous self-lubrication. A "weak shear zone" is an important concept in geology, and a large number of explanations, specific for tectonic conditions, have been proposed. We demonstrate here that weak shear zones are far more general, and that their emergence only demands that a microscopic, i.e., fragment-scale, stress relaxation mechanism develops during the fracture process.
ISSN:0031-9007
1079-7114
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevLett.119.255501