Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2122/16892
Authors: Cocco, Massimo* 
Aretusini, Stefano* 
Cornelio, Chiara* 
Nielsen, Stefan* 
Spagnuolo, Elena* 
Tinti, Elisa* 
Di Toro, Giulio* 
Title: Fracture Energy and Breakdown Work During Earthquakes
Journal: Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences 
Series/Report no.: /51 (2023)
Publisher: Annual Review
Issue Date: 6-Jan-2023
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-earth-071822-100304
Abstract: Large seismogenic faults consist of approximately meter-thick fault cores surrounded by hundreds-of-meters-thick damage zones. Earthquakes are generated by rupture propagation and slip within fault cores and dissipate the stored elastic strain energy in fracture and frictional processes in the fault zone and in radiated seismic waves. Understanding this energy partitioning is fundamental in earthquake mechanics to explain fault dynamic weakening and causative rupture processes operating over different spatial and temporal scales. The energy dissipated in the earthquake rupture propagation along a fault is called fracture energy or breakdown work. Here we review fracture energy estimates from seismological, modeling, geological, and experimental studies and show that fracture energy scales with fault slip. We conclude that although material-dependent constant fracture energies are important at the microscale for fracturing grains of the fault zone, they are negligible with respect to the macroscale processes governing rupture propagation on natural faults.
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