Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2025

Presentation information

[J] Oral

S (Solid Earth Sciences ) » S-CG Complex & General

[S-CG54] New Insights of Fluid-Rock Interactions: From Surface to Deep Subduction Zone

Fri. May 30, 2025 10:45 AM - 12:15 PM 105 (International Conference Hall, Makuhari Messe)

convener:Atsushi Okamoto(Graduate School of Environmental Studies), Jun Muto(Department of Earth Sciences, Tohoku University), Ikuo Katayama(Department of Earth and Planetary Systems Science, Hiroshima University), Junichi Nakajima(Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Institute of Science Tokyo), Chairperson:Miho Furukawa(Department of Earth Science, Tohoku University), Ken-ichi Hirauchi(Department of Geosciences, Faculty of Science, Shizuoka University)

12:00 PM - 12:15 PM

[SCG54-12] Water-promoted deformation mechanisms: experiments of quartz-albite mixtures at brittle-ductile transitional condition

*Miho Furukawa1, Sando Sawa1, Hiroyuki Nagahama1, Oliver Plümper2, Jun Muto1 (1.Department of Earth Science, Graduate School of Science, Tohoku University, 2.Department of Earth Sciences, Utrecht University)


Keywords:upper crust, fluid-rock interaction, quartz-feldspar mixture, deformation experiment, microstructure, brittle-ductile transition

The strength of the upper crust is estimated to become maximum around the brittle-ductile transition zone and is expected to decrease in the presence of water[1]. Laboratory experiments have shown strength reduction in wet conditions, where grain boundary migration is observed to be promoted[2]. However, experimental data on polymineralic aggregates with water are lacking, particularly for the realistic continental crust composition of quartz-feldspar mixtures. Aiming to reveal how water affects the deformation mechanisms that reduce the bulk strength, we performed shear deformation experiments on quartz-albite aggregates using a Griggs-type apparatus with solid salt assembly. To investigate the difference in the dominant deformation mechanism between different amounts of water, we varied the water contents into 0.2 wt% and 0.4 wt%, and further compared them to the sample deformed at a room-dry condition[3]. The confining pressure PC and the temperature T were set almost identical (PC: 750-760 MPa and T: 720 °C) in all the experiments so that the only difference between these experiments was the water amount. Each experiment used sample mixtures of ~ 0.1 g. The shear strain rate was repeatedly changed between ~ 10-3 /s and ~ 10-4 /s to evaluate the dependence of the strength on the strain rate. The retrieved samples underwent observations using electron microscopes. The sample deformed with the 0.4 wt% water further underwent a transmission electron microscopy (TEM).
Mechanical results show that the peak shear stress decreases with increasing water. The sample with 0.2 wt% of water reaches 1040 MPa while that deformed with 0.4 wt% of water reaches 790 MPa. Both of these values are smaller than the peak shear stress of the room-dry experiment, that is 1280 MPa[3]. In the experiment with 0.2 wt% of water, the shear stress remains almost constant towards the final shear strain. Meanwhile, in the experiment with 0.4 wt% of water, the shear stress shows a reduction from the peak value by 200 MPa towards the end of the experiment.
Microstructural observations revealed that foliations similar to an S-C’ mylonite develop in the sample deformed with the 0.2 wt% of water. Both albite domains and quartz domains are foliated. Meanwhile, in the sample deformed with the 0.4 wt% of water, the sample layer is pervasively fractured. These microstructures in the water-added samples differ from those in the as-is sample, where fractures are localized in the quartz domains and the albite domains show few pores[3]. Furthermore, TEM observation of the sample deformed with the 0.4 wt% of water confirmed nanograins.
Our results suggest a change in deformation mechanisms with different amounts of water. With the 0.2 wt% of water, the quartz domains become weaker than those in the room-dry condition and ductile flow occurs in accordance with the albite domains. With further addition of water to 0.4 wt%, deformation is accommodated by fracturing, potentially due to the water-assisted reduction of the mineral surface energy as previously suggested for quartz[4]. We conclude that a subtle increase in water changes the dominant deformation mechanism from ductile to brittle. Such a transition would potentially explain seismic observations suggesting that upwelling fluids could be the cause of earthquake swarms[5].

References
[1] Kohlstedt et al., 1995JGR.
[2] Pongrac et al., 2022JSG.
[3] Furukawa et al., 2023 WRI-17.
[4] Parks, 1984JGR.
[5] Nakajima, 2022EPS.