Question: one can measure three kinds of elastic strain with simple laboratory experiments. What are those, or the names of the associated elastic parameters?Stress at any point will have both an isotropic component, called the pressure p, and a deviatoric component that varies with direction. The variation usually simplifies to a symmetric ellipsoid having three principal and mutually orthogonal axes. The values of these axes are called the principal stresses. A deviatoric stress will have a maximum principal stress
For rocks the mathematical relation between stress and strain can vary enormously depending on composition, temperature, strain rate, and strain history. This relation is called a constitutive relation. A simple linear proportional relation between the two, as with a spring constant, is a linear elastic constitutive relation. There are also non-linear, exponential relations for inelastic, plastic or viscous solids and fluids.
Two very different constitutive relations may operate on the same material, with the strain rate determining which will control the mode of deformation. Most solids will react elastically and with great strength when hit with a sledgehammer to induce a very high rate of strain, producing fracturing. The same solids (e.g.: silly putty, soil, asphalt, glass, steel, quartz, olivine) will exhibit very little strength and flow viscously or creep plastically when stressed over very long time periods.
(J. Louie)
| X | Y | Z | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Normal | |||
| Thrust | |||
| Strike-Slip |
Question: are single crystals or rocks stronger? Why?
Brittle fracturing, or cataclasis, occurs in this microscopic or
thin-section view when tensional stresses
become great enough to break across mineral grains, or sever the bonds
between them and cause rows of them to roll.
Shear fracture will take place on complementary planes oriented about
60 degrees from the direction of
.
Elastic deformation is temporary and reversible until fracture is
achieved.
(from Kearey & Vine, copyright Blackwell Sci. Publ.)
Plastic Flow produces limited, permanent strains at high stresses when the yield strength of mineral grains is exceeded and they deform by gliding along internal dislocation planes or grain boundaries. Such crystal-structure dislocations, as in this microscopic view, can heal quickly and may actually strengthen the rock (work hardening).
You hammer on metal to exceed its yield strength (still much less than its
elastic tensile strength) to plastically and permanently deform it.
(from Kearey & Vine, copyright Blackwell Sci. Publ.)
Power-Law Creep takes place only at high temperature, at least 55% of the melting temperature. Most minerals melt at temperatures between 400 and 1800 C, so power-law creep takes place in the lower crust or deeper. For this mechanism the constitutive relation gives the strain rate with time as proportional to an exponential power of the applied stress, with the exponent being 3 or greater. A newtonian viscous fluid has strain rate proportional to the stress with an exponent of one.
Internal gliding dislocation, as with plastic flow, is the main mechanism of deformation for power-law creep. However, the high temperature allows diffusion of atoms and recrystallization, so creep can continue to strains in excess of 100% at relatively low stresses.
Power-law creep is likely the dominant mode of deformation in the mantle.
(from Kearey & Vine, copyright Blackwell Sci. Publ.)
Diffusion Creep occurs when temperatures exceed 85% of the melting temperature. Such temperatures lead to rapid diffusion and atom migration along stress gradients, promoting continual recrystallization.
Diffusion creep has a newtonian constitutive relation with strain rate
proportional to the first power of stress, so such materials flow like
fluids.
This mechanism should be operating in regions just below the solidus temperature,
like the LVZ or Asthenosphere that underlies the oceanic lithosphere.
Question: think of a situation involving power-law or diffusion creep of a rock formation at surface temperatures and pressures.
(from Kearey & Vine, copyright Blackwell Sci. Publ.)
Given a constant composition, as with the olivine making up most of the
oceanic lithosphere, one can compute a strength envelope, as above,
by figuring out what mechanism will make the rock weakest at any
given depth.
To depths of 30 km or so temperatures are low enough for highly-refractory
olivine that brittle fracture is the easiest mode of deformation.
Thus to that depth the strength envelope is linearly increasing.
Below 30 km the temperature is high enough that the power-law creep
mechanism, exponentially decreasing strength with increasing depth and temperature,
takes over as the dominant weakening mechanism.
Thus lithospheric strength peaks near 30 km, where the curves intersect.
Most earthquakes nucleate near this depth, and of course break only through
the brittle lithosphere above.
In the continental lithosphere the strength envelope is complicated by the high quartz content of the crust. Quartz has a lower melting temperature than olivine, so power-law creep takes over and the strength envelope peaks in the continents at 15 km depth. This in fact is the maximum depth of most earthquakes, and their depth of nucleation. The continental strength envelope has a second peak in the olivine just below the Moho.
Question: how can earthquakes occur in some places to depths of 670 km?
Question: where should the lithosphere be relatively thin? relatively thick?
The asthenosphere below responds as a viscous fluid, possibly with strains in excess of 100%, since it is weaker and serves to absorb most of the deformation. As a viscous fluid with a first-order differential equation of motion it damps out the wavy shape of the lithospheric flex.
If the deformation were all elastic, removing the load would immediately
remove the deformation in one big earthquake.
But the viscous asthenosphere has to flow back into place below, which
takes an exponential time constant related to the viscosity.
Question: describe three different ways to load the lithosphere and observe flexure, and name an example of each.