Title of article :
Charge generation and propagation in igneous rocks
Author/Authors :
Freund، Friedemann نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages :
-542
From page :
543
To page :
0
Abstract :
Various electrical phenomena have been reported prior to or concurrent with earthquakes such as resistivity changes, ground potentials, electromagnetic (EM), and luminous signals. Doubts have been raised as to whether some of these phenomena are real and indeed precursory. One of the reasons for uncertainty is that, despite decades of intense work, there is still no physically coherent model. Using low- to medium-velocity impacts to measure electrical signals with microsecond time resolution, it has now been observed that when dry gabbro and diorite cores are impacted at relatively low velocities, ~100 m/s, highly mobile charge carriers are generated in a small volume near the impact point. They spread through the rocks, causing electric potentials exceeding +400 mV, EM, and light emission. As the charge cloud spreads, the rock becomes momentarily conductive. When a dry granite block is impacted at higher velocity, ~1.5 km/s, the propagation of the P and S waves is registered through the transient piezoelectric response of quartz. After the sound waves have passed, the surface of the granite block becomes positively charged, suggesting the same charge carriers as observed during the low-velocity impact experiments, expanding from within the bulk. During the next 2–3 ms the surface potential oscillates, indicating pulses of electrons injected from ground and contact electrodes. The observations are consistent with positive holes, e.g. defect electrons in the O2- sublattice, traveling via the O 2p-dominated valence band of the silicate minerals. Before activation, the positive holes lay dormant in the form of electrically inactive positive hole pairs (PHP), chemically equivalent to peroxy links, O3X/OO&bslash;XO3, with X=Si4+, Al3+, etc. PHPs are introduced into the minerals by way of hydroxyl, O3X–OH, which all nominally anhydrous minerals incorporate when crystallizing in H2Oladen environments. The fact that positive holes can be activated by low-energy impacts, and their attendant sound waves, suggests that they can also be activated by microfracturing. Depending on where in the stressed rock volume the charge carriers are activated, they will form rapidly moving or fluctuating charge clouds that may account for earthquake-related electrical signals and EM emission. Wherever such charge clouds intersect the surface, high fields are expected, causing electric discharges and earthquake lights.
Keywords :
startle , prepulse inhibition , anticholinergics , latency , cholinergic system
Journal title :
Journal of Geodynamics
Serial Year :
2002
Journal title :
Journal of Geodynamics
Record number :
55732
Link To Document :
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