Abundant heterogeneity has been documented on faults in nature across a wide range of length scales, including structural, mineralogical, and roughness variations. The role of complex heterogeneity on fault mechanics and frictional stability is not well established, and experiments investigating heterogeneity have typically incorporated a single source of heterogeneity. Here, we conduct rock friction experiments on rough, bimaterial faults that are creeping, or steadily sliding, to explore the role of lithological heterogeneity on fault mechanics and stability. When strong asperities juxtapose weak gouge, stable sliding occurs with a low friction coefficient, µ. Encounters of strong diabase asperities on talc gouge lined faults initiate dramatic increases in µ and transitions to unstable sliding characterized by frequent stick-slip events (StSE). Seismic moments and stress drops of StSE decrease with increasing asperity abundance. Stress is concentrated at asperities during encounters, increasing with decreasing asperity abundance and leading to extensive mechanical damage. Interactions between strong, velocity weakening asperities provide a model to explain the nucleation of seismic and aseismic slip events on nominally stable, creeping faults.
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This content will become publicly available on March 18, 2026
Velocity Dependence of Dynamic Rock Friction Modulated by Dynamic Rupture in High‐Speed Friction and Stick‐Slip Tests
Abstract Rock friction tests have made profound contributions to our understanding of earthquake processes. Most rock friction tests focused on fault strength evolution during velocity steps or at specific slip rates and the characteristics during stick‐slip events such as dynamic rupture propagation and the transition from stable sliding to instability, with little attention paid to the transient acceleration and deceleration periods. Here, we present Westerly Granite fault friction test results using a unique pneumatically powered apparatus with high acceleration of up to 50 g, focusing on the transient stages of fast fault acceleration and deceleration during both high‐speed sliding and stick‐slip events. Our data demonstrates the dominating velocity‐weakening behavior at transient stages of fault acceleration and deceleration, with a 1/V dependence for peak friction and deceleration lobe consistent with the flash‐heating model but with the acceleration lobe consistently deviating from the 1/V dependence. Our analysis of velocity‐dependent friction between dynamic rupture events, stick‐slips, and high‐speed friction tests reveals the significance of high acceleration in influencing transient fault weakening during dynamic weakening. We further demonstrate that the deviation of the friction‐velocity curve from the 1/V trend during fault acceleration is associated with the contribution of the dynamic rupturing process during the initiation of fault slip.
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- Award ID(s):
- 2225216
- PAR ID:
- 10581446
- Publisher / Repository:
- DOI PREFIX: 10.1029
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
- Volume:
- 130
- Issue:
- 3
- ISSN:
- 2169-9313
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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