AN

André R. Niemeijer

info

Please Note

5 records found

The effects of stress perturbations on friction are crucial for understanding earthquake triggering. Previous experimental studies have primarily been conducted at room temperature, where fault gouge materials typically exhibit velocity-strengthening and frictionally stable behav ...
Fault normal stress (σn) changes dynamically during earthquakes. However, the impact of these changes on fault strength is poorly understood. We explore the effects of rapidly varying σn by conducting rotary-shear experiments on simulated fault gouges at 1 μ ...
Rock materials show dramatic dynamic weakening in large-displacement (m), high-velocity (∼1 m/s) friction experiments, providing a mechanism for the generation of large, natural earthquakes. However, whether such weakening occurs during induced M3-4 earthquakes (dm displacements) ...
The maximum fault strength and rate of interseismic fault strengthening (“healing”) are of great interest to earthquake hazard assessment studies, as they directly relate to event magnitude and recurrence time. Previous laboratory studies have revealed two distinct frictional hea ...

Flow-to-Friction Transition in Simulated Calcite Gouge

Experiments and Microphysical Modeling

A (micro)physical understanding of the transition from frictional sliding to plastic or viscous flow has long been a challenge for earthquake cycle modeling. We have conducted ring-shear deformation experiments on layers of simulated calcite fault gouge under conditions close to ...