Title of article
Can Damage Mechanics Explain Temporal Scaling Laws in Brittle Fracture and Seismicity?
Author/Authors
Donald L. Turcotte، نويسنده , , Robert Shcherbakov، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages
15
From page
1031
To page
1045
Abstract
Time delays associated with processes leading to a failure or stress relaxation in materials
and earthquakes are studied in terms of continuum damage mechanics. Damage mechanics is a quasiempirical
approach that describes inelastic irreversible phenomena in the deformation of solids. When a
rock sample is loaded, there is generally a time delay before the rock fails. This period is characterized by
the occurrence and coalescence of microcracks which radiate acoustic signals of broad amplitudes. These
acoustic emission events have been shown to exhibit power-law scaling as they increase in intensity prior
to a rupture. In case of seismogenic processes in the Earth’s brittle crust, all earthquakes are followed by
an aftershock sequence. A universal feature of aftershocks is that their rate decays in time according to
the modified Omori’s law, a power-law decay. In this paper a model of continuum damage mechanics in
which damage (microcracking) starts to develop when the applied stress exceeds a prescribed yield stress
(a material parameter) is introduced to explain both laboratory experiments and systematic temporal
variations in seismicity.
Keywords
fracture , seismicity , aftershocks , power-law scaling. , Damage mechanics
Journal title
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Serial Year
2006
Journal title
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Record number
429954
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