TY - JOUR
T1 - New granular rock-analogue materials for simulation of multi-scale fault and fracture processes
AU - Massaro, L.
AU - Adam, J.
AU - Jonade, E.
AU - Yamada, Y.
N1 - Funding Information:
The research described in this paper includes work conducted during a PhD study undertaken as part of the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) in Oil & Gas (grant no. NE/M00578X/1) sponsored by the Royal Holloway University of London, whose support is gratefully acknowledged. We extend our thanks to Kevin D’Souza for the photographs and the technical help and to Jerry Morris for the engineering support at RHUL Analogue Tectonic Modelling Laboratories. We acknowledge the guest editor Fabrizio Balsamo, Yago Nestola and an anonymous reviewer for their helpful remarks and suggestions for revision.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - In this study, we present a new granular rock-analogue material (GRAM) with a dynamic scaling suitable for the simulation of fault and fracture processes in analogue experiments. Dynamically scaled experiments allow the direct comparison of geometrical, kinematical and mechanical processes between model and nature. The geometrical scaling factor defines the model resolution, which depends on the density and cohesive strength ratios of model material and natural rocks. Granular materials such as quartz sands are ideal for the simulation of upper crustal deformation processes as a result of similar nonlinear deformation behaviour of granular flow and brittle rock deformation. We compared the geometrical scaling factor of common analogue materials applied in tectonic models, and identified a gap in model resolution corresponding to the outcrop and structural scale (1-100 m). The proposed GRAM is composed of quartz sand and hemihydrate powder and is suitable to form cohesive aggregates capable of deforming by tensile and shear failure under variable stress conditions. Based on dynamical shear tests, GRAM is characterized by a similar stress-strain curve as dry quartz sand, has a cohesive strength of 7.88 kPa and an average density of 1.36 g cm-3. The derived geometrical scaling factor is 1 cm in model = 10.65 m in nature. For a large-scale test, GRAM material was applied in strike-slip analogue experiments. Early results demonstrate the potential of GRAM to simulate fault and fracture processes, and their interaction in fault zones and damage zones during different stages of fault evolution in dynamically scaled analogue experiments.
AB - In this study, we present a new granular rock-analogue material (GRAM) with a dynamic scaling suitable for the simulation of fault and fracture processes in analogue experiments. Dynamically scaled experiments allow the direct comparison of geometrical, kinematical and mechanical processes between model and nature. The geometrical scaling factor defines the model resolution, which depends on the density and cohesive strength ratios of model material and natural rocks. Granular materials such as quartz sands are ideal for the simulation of upper crustal deformation processes as a result of similar nonlinear deformation behaviour of granular flow and brittle rock deformation. We compared the geometrical scaling factor of common analogue materials applied in tectonic models, and identified a gap in model resolution corresponding to the outcrop and structural scale (1-100 m). The proposed GRAM is composed of quartz sand and hemihydrate powder and is suitable to form cohesive aggregates capable of deforming by tensile and shear failure under variable stress conditions. Based on dynamical shear tests, GRAM is characterized by a similar stress-strain curve as dry quartz sand, has a cohesive strength of 7.88 kPa and an average density of 1.36 g cm-3. The derived geometrical scaling factor is 1 cm in model = 10.65 m in nature. For a large-scale test, GRAM material was applied in strike-slip analogue experiments. Early results demonstrate the potential of GRAM to simulate fault and fracture processes, and their interaction in fault zones and damage zones during different stages of fault evolution in dynamically scaled analogue experiments.
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U2 - 10.1017/S0016756821001321
DO - 10.1017/S0016756821001321
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85121996429
JO - Geological Magazine
JF - Geological Magazine
SN - 0016-7568
ER -