Title of article :
Simulation of the Micro-physics of Rocks Using LSMearth
Author/Authors :
D. Place ، نويسنده , , F. Lombard، نويسنده , , P. Mora، نويسنده , , Donato S. Abe، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Abstract :
The particle-based Lattice Solid Model (LSM) was developed to provide a basis to study
the physics of rocks and the nonlinear dynamics of earthquakes (MORA and PLACE, 1994; PLACE and
MORA, 1999). A new modular and flexible LSM approach has been developed that allows different microphysics
to be easily included in or removed from the model. The approach provides a virtual laboratory
where numerical experiments can easily be set up and all measurable quantities visualised. The proposed
approach provides a means to simulate complex phenomena such as fracturing or localisation processes,
and enables the effect of different micro-physics on macroscopic behaviour to be studied. The initial 2-D
model is extended to allow three-dimensional simulations to be performed and particles of different sizes to
be specified. Numerical bi-axial compression experiments under different confining pressure are used to
calibrate the model. By tuning the different microscopic parameters (such as coefficient of friction,
microscopic strength and distribution of grain sizes), the macroscopic strength of the material and can be
adjusted to be in agreement with laboratory experiments, and the orientation of fractures is consistent with
the theoretical value predicted based on Mohr-Coulomb diagram. Simulations indicate that 3-D numerical
models have different macroscopic properties than in 2-D and, hence, the model must be recalibrated for 3-
D simulations. These numerical experiments illustrate that the new approach is capable of simulating
typical rock fracture behaviour. The new model provides a basis to investigate nucleation, rupture and slip
pulse propagation in complex fault zones without the previous model limitations of a regular low-level
surface geometry and being restricted to two-dimensions.
Keywords :
fracture , shear localisation , earthquake simulation , earthquake dynamics , lattice solidmodel , particle-based model.
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics
Journal title :
Pure and Applied Geophysics