The effect of micas on the strength of experimental granitoid fault gouge

Publication date

2025-06-27

Authors

Zhan, W.
Niemeijer, Andre RikISNI 0000000436376624
Berger, A.
Spiers, ChrisISNI 0000000394256746
Gfeller, F. E.
Herwegh, M.

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Document Type

Article
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Abstract

Sheet silicates play an important role in shaping crustal rheology and shear localization at shallow depths through their low strength. However, their effect at deeper levels (>3 km) remains unclear. We conducted hydrothermal ring shear experiments on three simulated gouges with similar quartz content but varying mica types and contents. Applied temperatures T ranged from 20 to 650 °C, with sliding velocities V between 0.03 and 1 μm/s, and an effective normal stress and pore water pressure of 100 MPa. Shear strains up to 30 were attained. At 1 μm/s and 20 °C, granitoids exhibit a higher friction coefficient (μ = 0.81) than the muscovite-rich (μ = 0.47) and biotite-rich gouges (μ = 0.44). With increasing T at a fixed V of 1 μm/s, μ of granitoids decreases to 0.61 at 650 °C, whereas muscovite- and biotite-rich gouges strengthen (μ = 0.56–0.69) until T reaches 200–450 °C. At 650 °C, weakening is observed in granitoid and muscovite-rich gouges as V decreases, while biotite-rich gouge shows no change. Granitoids are weaker than the mica-rich gouges once V decreases to 0.03 μm/s and T reaches 650 °C. All gouges at 650 °C exhibit μm-wide principal slip zones, featuring microstructures consistent with dissolution-precipitation creep (DPC). These include truncated grain contacts, mineral precipitates, submicrometer grain size and low porosity. Muscovite breakdown and biotite formation occurs in muscovite-rich gouge as they weaken. Our results imply that mica enrichment in granitoid faults can lead to a weaker upper crust and stronger middle crusts as they weaken less than granitoids. The onset of DPC may trigger a frictional-viscous transition at greenschist facies depths.

Keywords

Continental crust, Deformation, Dissolution precipitation creep, Fault gouge, Mica, Mineral reaction, Geophysics, Earth-Surface Processes

Citation

Zhan, W, Niemeijer, A R, Berger, A, Spiers, C J, Gfeller, F E & Herwegh, M 2025, 'The effect of micas on the strength of experimental granitoid fault gouge', Tectonophysics, vol. 908, 230772. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2025.230772