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Mechanical data of simulated basalt-built faults from rotary shear and direct shear experiments

Cite as:

Giacomel, Piercarlo; Ruggieri, Roberta; Scuderi, Marco Maria; Spagnuolo, Elena; Di Toro, Giulio; Collettini, Cristiano (2021): Mechanical data of simulated basalt-built faults from rotary shear and direct shear experiments. GFZ Data Services. https://doi.org/10.5880/fidgeo.2020.035

Status

I   N       R   E   V   I   E   W : Giacomel, Piercarlo; Ruggieri, Roberta; Scuderi, Marco Maria; Spagnuolo, Elena; Di Toro, Giulio; Collettini, Cristiano (2021): Mechanical data of simulated basalt-built faults from rotary shear and direct shear experiments. GFZ Data Services. https://doi.org/10.5880/fidgeo.2020.035

Abstract

Here we report the raw data of the friction experiments carried out on basalt-built simulated faults defined by rock-on-rock contacts and powdered gouge. The experiments were specifically designed to investigate the role of fault microstructure on the frictional properties of basalts and the fault slip stability, and were conducted with the rotary-shear apparatus (SHIVA) and the biaxial deformation apparatus (BRAVA), hosted at the National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology (INGV) in Rome.

Simulated faults were sheared at constant normal stress from 4 to 30 MPa. In SHIVA experiments, we deformed samples at constant slip velocity of 10 μm/s up to 56 mm net slip. In BRAVA tests we performed a sequence of velocity steps (0.1 to 300 μm/s), followed by slide-hold-slide tests (30-3000 s holds; V=10 μm/s slides).

Our main results highlight the frictionally strong nature of basalt faults and show opposite friction velocity dependence upon the velocity upsteps: while fault gouges exhibit velocity weakening behavior with increasing normal stress and sliding velocity, bare rock surfaces transition to velocity strengthening behavior as we approach higher slip velocities. The experiments setup and data are further described in the manuscript “Frictional properties of basalt experimental faults and implications for volcano-tectonic settings and geo-energy sites” to which these data are supplementary material.

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Contributors

HP-HT Laboratory of Experimental Volcanolgy and Geophysics (INGV, Italy); Piercarlo Giacomel

Keywords

Fault mechanics, Friction of basalts, Rate and State Friction, Bare rock surfaces, Simulated fault gouge, EPOS, multi-scale laboratories, rock and melt physical properties, alkali-olivine_basalt, Biaxial, Rotary Shear, Friction, Strain gauge, Biaxial, Friction, Rotary Shear, Strain gauge, alkali-olivine_basalt

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License: CC BY 4.0

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