Abstract
Slow-slip events are earthquake-like events only with much lower slip rates. While peak coseismic velocities can reach tens of meters per second, slow-slip is on the order of 10−7±2 m/s and may last for days to weeks. Under the rate-and-state model of fault friction, slow-slip is produced only when the asperity size is commensurate with the critical nucleation size, a function of frictional properties. However, it is unlikely that all subduction zones embody the same frictional properties. In addition to friction, plastic flow of antigorite-rich serpentinite may significantly influence the dynamics of fault slip near the mantle wedge corner. Here, we show that the range of frictional parameters that generate slow slip is widened in the presence of a serpentinized layer along the subduction plate interface. We observe increased stability and damping of fast ruptures in a semi-brittle fault zone governed by both brittle and viscoelastic constitutive response. The rate of viscous serpentinite flow, governed by dislocation creep, is enhanced by high ambient temperatures. When effective viscosity is taken to be dynamic, long-term slow slip events spontaneously emerge. Integration of rheology, thermal effects, and other microphysical processes with rate-and-state friction may yield further insight into the phenomenology of slow slip.
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Introduction
The dynamics of fault slip at subduction zones can assume a wide range of behaviors. A continuum of slip modes that includes fast earthquakes, slow-slip events, and stable creep determines seismic hazards1,2. Along the megathrust, earthquakes, very low frequency earthquakes, and tsunami earthquakes are typically found updip of the continental Mohorovicic (Moho) discontinuity. In contrast, slow-slip events are often found close to or below the continental Moho depth at many subduction zones around the circum-Pacific seismic belt3, even though some happen at shallow depth, notably in New Zealand4,5,6 and Costa Rica7,8. Slow-slip events at subduction zones worldwide often embody similar, characteristic features9,10,11,12,13. In particular, we observe small stress drops in the range 10–200 kPa, short recurrence times of a few months to a few years, and sometimes more regular periodicity than for earthquakes14. Some characteristics of slow-slip events can be explained within the context of rate-and-state friction15,16 with conditionally stable behavior17,18,19,20,21. Runaway frictional instabilities require a critical size for nucleation that depends on the frictional parameters and the effective confining pressure. For sufficiently small velocity-weakening asperities, only creep spontaneously occurs. Slow-slip events emerge spontaneously when the asperity size is commensurate to critical nucleation size22. As slow-slip events are now found close to universally at subduction zones23,24,25,26,27,28, it is unrealistic to expect the same combination of parameters across widely distant regions (Fig. 1A). Several authors developed and investigated other friction laws that regularize fast slip with a velocity-weakening to a velocity-strengthening transition29,30,31,32 or with dilatancy of the pore space33,34 that allows nucleation but resists fast slip. These models assume that slow-slip events represent brittle behavior and localization of deformation on the megathrust. Other authors investigated semi-brittle models for phyllicate-rich fault zones that include a frictional strength and the deformation of a mature fault gouge35,36,37, but their implications for slow slip are not known.
The location of slow slip around the continental Moho suggests a control by composition or rheology. The mantle wedge of subduction zones is filled with metamorphised upper mantle rocks in the form of antigorite-rich serpentinite (Fig. 1B), a high-pressure, low-temperature hydrous mineral characterized by a low activation energy for dislocation creep38,39,40. Laboratory experiments showed that serpentinite is velocity-strengthening at the low temperatures and pressures of the seismogenic zone, but velocity-weakening at and above 450 °C, at the pressure-temperature conditions of the corner of the mantle wedge, compatible with the occurrence of slow-slip events there41. Furthermore, laboratory friction experiments indicate that serpentine faults are characterized by a low healing rate and a large slip-weakening distance that promotes conditional stability, consistent with the slip mechanism of slow earthquakes42. The dominant flow mechanism of antigorite-rich serpentinite shows a transition from semi-brittle (localized) flow by strain localization to ductile (distributed) flow by intracrystalline deformation with increasing temperature from 300 °C to 500 °C at confining pressures from 1 to 2 GPa43,44. Serpentinite exhibits nonlinear plastic flow with an effective viscosity much lower than that of the major mantle-forming minerals38 allowing it to localize deformation. These laboratory results and field observations for exposed shear zones45,46,47 suggest that slow-slip events may be the result of mechanical instabilities that develop in a semi-brittle medium governed by both brittle and viscoelastic constitutive response.
Here, we present a model where, in addition to brittle rate-and-state friction, the strain and nonlinear rheology accommodated by a serpentinite layer are taken into account. We describe the semi-brittle constitutive model in Section 2. We then discuss the stability of semi-brittle fault zones in a simplified setting in Section 3. With this insight, we discuss the emergence and characteristics of slow-slip events in brittle and semi-brittle fault zones using earthquake cycle simulations performed in plane strain considering shear heating and thermal diffusion (Section 4). We find that fast ruptures can be damped out in a semi-brittle medium, resulting in the spontaneous generation of slow slip over a wider range of frictional parameters than for a brittle medium.
The semi-brittle mechanical model
To model the semi-brittle fault zone, we first introduce a point-like spring-slider-dashpot system. This mechanical system consists of a spring-slider obeying rate-and-state friction in series with a viscous dashpot (Fig. 1B). The constitutive law is given by
where Vf is the velocity of the slider governed by rate-and-state friction, and Vd is the velocity of the viscous dashpot, which is controlled by a thermally-activated strain rate \(\dot{\varepsilon }\). Wd is a characteristic width, taken as the width of the ductile shear zone near the fault, and is typically less than a few hundred meters45,48. The description of rate-and-state friction reads as
Here, τ is the fault shear stress, μ is the dynamic coefficient of friction, and \(\bar{\sigma }=\sigma -p\) is the effective normal stress, with p the pore pressure. The friction coefficient depends on a state variable θ, whose evolution is given by an aging law \(\dot{\theta }({V}_{{\rm{f}}},\theta )\). V0 and L are a reference slip rate and a characteristic weakening distance, respectively. For Vd = 0 we have a classical description of rate-and-state friction15,16, which reproduces many of the natural behaviors observed in real faults49,50,51,52,53,54. Such behaviors include unstable stick-slip cycles, stable creep, restrengthening following rapid slip, and rate-dependence. However, the classical description does not accommodate viscous effects. To account for this, we place a viscous dashpot in series with the spring-slider, and allow \({V}_{d}=2{W}_{d}\dot{\varepsilon }\) to be nonzero. The strain rate is given by a dislocation creep law55,56
where A is a reference strain rate, n is the dislocation creep exponent, Q is the activation energy, p is confining pressure, V is the activation volume, R is the ideal gas constant, and T is temperature. For modeling purposes we use the empirically-determined creep parameters for serpentinite38. The serpentinite effective viscosity \(\eta =\tau /\dot{\varepsilon }\) obeys an Arrhenius-style activation law with a low activation energy, and even at the 300–500 °C temperatures of subduction zones, viscous flow can be significant and play a nontrivial role in the dynamics of fault slip. It may be the case that once slip begins to accelerate due to frictional instabilities, viscous effects modulate the slip velocity.
The governing equation for the spring-slider-dashpot is given by
Here, δ is the total slip, with \(\dot{\delta }=V={V}_{{\rm{f}}}+{V}_{{\rm{d}}}\). The spring stiffness is K. There is a driving plate rate Vpl, which we can take to be the rate of plate convergence for a subduction zone, typically on the order of 10−9 m/s. The final term is the radiation damping approximation, used to account for inertial (body) terms in the equation of motion when modeling a finite fault. G is the shear modulus and Vs is the shear-wave speed. The constitutive laws (1–3) and the governing Equation (4) completely specify the system.
Stability of semi-brittle fault zones
First, we consider the classical model of rate-and-state friction with Vd = 0 and ignoring the radiation damping term. Perturbing the equations about steady-state and linearizing yields a result for the critical spring stiffness16
If K > Kc, then perturbations from steady-state are stable and the system shows a decaying oscillatory mode in phase space57. If K < Kc, then perturbations from steady-state are unstable and the system’s oscillations grow without bound in phase space. One can observe a continuum of behaviors between slow-slip events21 and large elastodynamic ruptures indexed by the stiffness ratio K/Kc, as also observed in laboratory experiments58,59,60. A larger ratio implies more stable and slower slip events, whereas a smaller ratio implies instability and fast slip. Alternating slow and fast slip events also occur close to the unit stiffness ratio22.
For the semi-brittle model of Section 2 with Vd ≠ 0, the stiffness becomes
with C a positive constant given by
This result was obtained by performing a linear stability analysis for the spring-slider-dashpot in the same manner as for the spring-slider (see supplementary materials). The subscript label ss denotes the steady-state values for the system. Note that for the spring-slider, Vf,ss = Vpl and C = 0, so that (6) reduces to (5) in the limit of vanishing Vd. The immediate significance of this result is that the critical stiffness is lowered in a partially viscous system. Thus, a wider range of the continuum of behaviors is occupied by stable, slow slip than for a purely rate-and-state frictional system. A set of frictional parameters that would have caused a fast rupture could instead result in a slow-slip event when viscous flow is activated.
Semi-brittle models of slow-slip events
We investigate whether the constitutive properties of the semi-brittle medium can reproduce the long durations, small stress drops, and short recurrence times of slow-slip events. We assume that slow-slip events take place in a highly foliated antigorite-rich serpentinite shear zone that exhibits both brittle and ductile behavior (Fig. 1B). We assume that the brittle behavior is captured by rate-and-state friction, and that the viscoelastic flow obeys a nonlinear power-law rheology of the form (3). An important feature of the plastic flow of serpentinite is the thermal activation in the form of an Arrhenius law. Even though serpentinite has a small activation energy of Q = 13.3 kJ/mol38, the potentially high dynamic range of temperature due to shear heating during fault slip may play an important role near the fault61. While we did not consider shear heating in the linear stability analysis of Section 3 for the sake of simplicity, we do incorporate it in the present numerical model. In particular, substantial thermal weakening may occur in the ductile shear zone that may actually enhance the rupture. To test the importance of this effect in the dynamics of slow slip, we build a two-dimensional model of fault slip that includes shear heating and the diffusion of temperature away from the fault62
where T is the deviation from the background temperature, k is the thermal diffusivity, V f is the velocity of fault slip, V d is the integrated velocity across the shear zone due to ductile strain, ρc is the specific heat per unit volume of the fault gouge, W f is the gouge width, W d is the width of the shear zone, and \(\hat{n}\) is the fault normal. Ω(y) = 1 for y in [−1/2, 1/2] and 0 elsewhere. We ignore the thermal pressurization of pore fluids63 as they become important for large slip typical of great earthquakes64.
We consider a two-dimensional finite-element thermomechanical model of a subduction zone megathrust with a one-dimensional fault surface consisting of N = 200 spring-slider-dashpot elements at depths of 30–60 km (Fig. 2). We adopt the same modeling strategy of 65 by simulating slow-slip events during the interseismic period. Accordingly, we assume that the updip portion of the model remains locked at all times during the simulation. The fault elements are mechanically coupled to one another with an N by N full stiffness matrix K following the integral method66. Instead of solving for the inertial contribution directly, we incorporate the radiation damping approximation at high slip velocities67. To allow for the possibility of shear heating and dynamic thermal effects, we take temperature to be a dynamic variable. The simulation method involves a set of coupled first-order ordinary differential equations evolved forward in time, and allows for temperature diffusion using finite differencing. For the time stepping, we employ the four/fifth-order Runge-Kutta method with adaptive time steps68. This method allows us to accurately resolve the rapid dynamics of fault slip and the long periods of quiescence during the interseismic period. As the time steps are adapted automatically, this allows us to capture all the instabilities, slow or fast, that emerge spontaneously.
We assume a small effective normal stress of \(\bar{\sigma }=6.25\) MPa, compatible with the small stress drop of slow-slip events and their sensitivity to small external perturbations69,70,71,72,73. The low effective normal stress may be caused by high pore pressures associated with the dehydration of the downgoing slab43,74,75. Note, however, that our model does not include dynamic dehydration. We choose a static friction coefficient of μ0 = 0.2 compatible with wet serpentinite48,76. For the velocity-weakening segment, we choose a depth range of 30–40 km and a − b = −2 × 10−3. We consider 40–50 km depths to be velocity-strengthening at a − b = 0.9 × 10−3. A fault half-width of W f = 250 mm is used to generate frictional shear heating63. We assume a width of 100 m for the extent of the viscous shear zone, compatible with outcrops of serpentinite breccia48. Inside the shear zone, the strain is assumed uniform in the fault-perpendicular direction. We model the megathrust dynamics with fault patches (and their surrounding ductile zone) of 150 m downdip width that is largely sufficient to resolve the critical nucleation size of h* = 8.4 km. We use a linear temperature profile in the range 300–500 °C over the modeled depths as an initial condition. This profile is representative of temperatures found at subduction zones that exhibit long-term SSEs, such as Nankai, Mexico, and Hikurangi77.
For the thermal diffusion in the fault perpendicular direction, we adopt a non-uniform mesh that extends symmetrically ±25 km away from the fault, in which the few samples closest to the fault have sub-meter thickness (25 cm) on both sides. One-sided finite differencing is used as a boundary condition at the lateral edges (±25 km) of the mesh, but this is far enough away from the fault such that the specific details of the condition does not affect the fault behavior significantly. Since the timesteps are adapted so that integration is always carried out within a specified tolerance, difficulties associated with the Courant-Friedrichs-Lewy (CFL) condition for explicit finite differencing can be circumvented. The model parameters are summarized in Table 1.
We compare the dynamics of fault slip for the brittle and semi-brittle cases. Brittle deformation represents the end-member for a peridotite mantle wedge with a high activation energy, or equivalently a cold geotherm, such as that at the Japan Trench. In both cases viscoelastic flow is negligible. In the brittle and semi-brittle models, the frictional properties are identical. We evaluate the resulting dynamics of fault slip for 30 years, representing about 15 events with recurrence times between 2 and 2.5 years (Figs 3 and 4). The relative importance of radiated energy is controlled by the peak slip velocity during a slip event. Slip events with peak velocity below the threshold78,79
emanate little radiation and can be considered dominantly aseismic. For the parameters in this study, Vth = 1.25 × 10−3 m/s. Peak slip rates for both the brittle and semi-brittle models are less than this threshold. In the case of brittle deformation (left panel in Fig. 4), we obtain fast slip events with peak velocities of 10−4 m/s, corresponding to ~200, 000 times the background plate rate. Even though these events are dominantly aseismic considering the criterion (9), they are impulsive and last about ~100 seconds. Using the simulation time steps as a proxy for frequency content, we infer that the source of these events possess energy around 1 Hz, making them detectable by standard seismological instruments. They may be considered the source of very low frequency earthquakes (VLFEs) that emanate seismic energy in narrow, low frequency bands compared to normal earthquakes1. When the presence of low-activation energy serpentinite is taken into account (right panel in Figs 3 and 4), the slip events are more emergent and last of the order of 6 months with a peak velocity of about four times the background plate rate. The computational time steps are all higher than 2 × 104 s, indicating a frequency content lower than detectable with broadband seismometers (~0.1 mHz), making these events practically aseismic.
The stress drops for both models fall within the range of observations on natural faults (Fig. 5), but while the stress drops for the brittle model are on the high range (~200 kPa), the ones for the semi-brittle model (~50 kPa) are more representative of the average of slow-slip event observations across subduction zones.
Following our concern about the role of shear heating, we evaluate the dynamics of temperature and resulting effective viscosities in the fault zones for both models (Fig. 5). The temperature increases more during mechanical instabilities in the brittle model due to the higher slip velocities and the narrower distribution of shear (W f < W d ) in this case. In both cases, the dynamic range is less than a few degrees. In the semi-brittle model, the effective viscosity varies within 0.1% of the average background value ηeffective = 4 × 1017 Pa s (Fig. 5C). The effective viscosity is also modulated in the brittle case, but the high-activation-energy fault zone has an effective viscosity many orders of magnitude higher at these temperature and pressure conditions. These results indicate that while shear heating does affect viscosity in the fault zone, the variations are not sufficient to melt the fault or produce significant additional weakening due to thermally activated viscosity during slow-slip events. However, our results do not preclude a more important role of shear heating for other regimes and faster slip velocities80,81,82,83,84,85. We find that the initial temperature profile plays a more important role. The qualitative features of our solution are robust to within about ±30 °C of the initial temperature condition. The model becomes brittle for a geotherm more than 30 °C colder, and ductile for a geotherm more than 30 °C warmer. Our model may explain the presence of long-term SSEs at the Nankai, Mexico, and Hikurangi subduction zones, where temperatures in the range 300–500 °C are found at the mantle wedge corner. Our model may also explain the absence of long-term SSEs at the Japan Trench where the mantle wedge is cold, and at the Northern Cascadia subduction zone where the 300–500 °C region is relatively narrow77.
Slow-slip events at subduction zones exhibit complex patterns of rupture propagation highlighted by rapid tremor reversals23,86,87,88. Our two-dimensional numerical models are limited to one direction of slip, but the rupture velocity can be related to the dynamic stress drop and the peak slip velocity89,90
With a peak velocity V p = 2 × 10−9 m/s, and a dynamic stress drop of Δτdyn = 50 kPa (Figs 4 and 5), we estimate the rupture velocity V r = 0.3 km/day, commensurate with, but on the low range of, along-strike propagation velocities12,91,92. An important shortcoming of our two-dimensional model is that we cannot discuss the faster tremor propagation velocity in the updip direction92,93.
Discussion and conclusion
The simulated events in the semi-brittle model reproduce many characteristic features of natural slow-slip events. In particular, we note a recurrence time of about two years, a stress drop of about 50 kPa, a slip rate just a few multiples of plate rate, and a long duration. While slow-slip events can be obtained in purely brittle models of slip evolution within the rate-and-state framework, our study shows that viscoelastic flow in a narrow shear zone centered about the fault can regularize fast slip, thereby permitting slow slip for a wider range of frictional parameters. If the semi-brittle constitutive behavior is associated with a serpentinized plate interface below the forearc Moho, it may explain the near-universal presence of slow-slip events around subduction zones at these depths.
We note an important difference between our semi-brittle model and others. While those models with a transition from velocity-weakening to velocity-strengthening at high slip speeds systematically damp fast slip, our semi-brittle model produces slow-slip events only for a given range of frictional and rheological parameters (see Section 3) and may produce fast elasto-dynamic ruptures under other conditions. In particular, ruptures that propagated in the seismogenic zone may continue to propagate in the semi-brittle region.
These results highlight the importance of rheological behavior for fault dynamics and seismic hazards. While serpentinite is thought to inhibit the nucleation of seismic rupture43, it may be responsible for the dynamic stabilization of fault slip in the mantle wedge corner, as also inferred from laboratory studies41. While slow-slip events are thought to arrest ruptures94, we note that antigorite shear zones may still play an important role in controlling the propagation of earthquake ruptures by the formation of partially amorphized material due to a combination of flash weakening and thermal pressurization95. The degree of metamorphism of serpentinite within the mantle wedge corner may also be responsible for the rheological separation of slow-slip events and episodic tremor and slip2,77, ‘perhaps corresponding to various degrees of dominance of the ductile behavior’.
Data availability
The datasets generated during and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
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Acknowledgements
We thank Chris Marone and an anonymous reviewer for their valuable comments. This research was supported by the National Research Foundation of Singapore under the NRF Fellowship scheme (National Research Fellow Awards No. NRF-NRFF2013-04) and by the Earth Observatory of Singapore, the National Research Foundation, and the Singapore Ministry of Education under the Research Centres of Excellence initiative. A. Goswami acknowledges the financial support received from the Caltech Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship (SURF) program. A. Goswami is the 2017 Kiyo and Eiko Tomiyasu SURF Scholar, and received funding jointly from the California Institute of Technology and Nanyang Technological University. This work comprises Earth Observatory of Singapore contribution no. 173.
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A.G. conducted the stability analysis and the numerical modeling. S.B. designed the study and prepared the figures. All authors wrote and reviewed the manuscript text.
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Goswami, A., Barbot, S. Slow-slip events in semi-brittle serpentinite fault zones. Sci Rep 8, 6181 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-24637-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-24637-z
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