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(Scholz, 1990)

(Scholz, 1990). (Scholz, 1990). Friction behavior for a wide range of materials is shown for step changes in load point velocity (Dieterich & Kilgore 1994).

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(Scholz, 1990)

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  1. (Scholz, 1990)

  2. (Scholz, 1990)

  3. Friction behavior for a wide range of materials is shown for step changes in load point velocity (Dieterich & Kilgore 1994). Experimental data show that, whatever the material conidered, friction depends on sliding rate and that changes in slip rates are followed by a transient adjustment .

  4. Time dependence of static friction for loading with Vs/r = 1 and 10 m/s. The data indicate that static friction and healing vary with loading rate and therefore that static friction is a system response. Lines represent best fit log-linear relations. (Marone, 1998)

  5. Dc Static friction depends on hold time and dynamic friction decreases with slip rate. These phenomena contribute to an apparent slip-weakening friction law. (Marone, 1998)

  6. Previous figure (a) Measurements of the relative variation in static friction with hold time for initially bare rock surfaces (solid symbols) and granular fault gouge (open symbols). The data have been offset to ms = 0.6 at 1 s and thus represent relative changes in static friction. (b) Friction data versus displacement, showing measurements of static friction and s in slide-hold-slide experiments. Hold times are given below. In this case the loading velocity before and after holding Vs/r was 3 m/s (data from Marone 1998). (c) The relative dynamic coefficient of friction is shown versus slip velocity for initially bare rock surfaces (solid symbols) and granular fault gouge (open symbols). The data have been offset to d = 0.6 at 1 m/s. (d) Data showing the transient and steady-state effect on friction (see Figure 2 for identification of friction parameters) of a change in loading velocity for a 3-mm-thick layer of quartz gouge sheared under nominally dry conditions at 25-MPa normal stress (data from J Johnson & C Marone). (Marone, 1998)

  7. Friction depends on temperature (following an Arrhenius law) Example of the results and model simulations of slip velocity and temperature stepping experiments on wet quartz gouge [Chester, 1994]. Sequence of velocity and temperature steps imposed on the gouge layers is shown. The friction response of quartz gouge is indicated by the thin lines (observed) and thick lines (model). The model is based on the state variable friction constitutive relation described in the text. The plot illustrates that for an abrupt change in temperature or slip rate, friction shows an immediate change (direct effect) followed by a gradual change in the opposite sense (evolution effect) to a new steady state value (Chester, 1995)

  8. All these observations can be reconciled from Rate-and-State Formalism • t/s=m=m*(T)+a ln(V/V*)+b ln(q/q*) • dq/dt=1-Vq /Dc where m*(T)=m*(T*) + a(Q/R) (1/T-1/T*) (Dieterich 1981; Ruina 1983, Chester, 1995) mss= m*+(a-b) ln(V/V*) At steady State:

  9. Condition for stick-slip • At steady state: • The system is rate-strengthening if a>b • The system is rate-weakening if b>a, mss= m*+(a-b) ln(V/V*) • - stick-slip slip is possible if the decrease of friction is more rapid than elastic unloading during slip: F/u>K, i.e. (ms-md)σn/Dc>K • - Otherwise the system will undergo stable frictional sliding

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