Faulting of rocks as a critical energy process
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Abstract
Abstract Faulting of rocks is a dominant earth process that governs small-scale fracturing, formation of tectonic plate boundaries, and earthquakes occurrence1–4. Since the 18th century, the mechanical settings for rock faulting were commonly analyzed with the Coulomb criterion5 that offers empirical, useful tools for scientific and engineering applications1,6–12. Here we revisit the processes of rock faulting by an alternative approach that incorporates elastic energy, strain-state, and three-dimensional deformation; these mechanical fundamentals are missing in Coulomb criterion. We propose that a stressed rock-body fails as two conditions are met: (1) The elastic energy generated by the loading system equals or exceeds a critical energy intensity that is required for the faulting process; (2) The internal strain of the stressed rock-body due to slip and dilation along the developing faults equals the strain-state created by the loading system to maintain physical continuity13,14. Our simulations reveal that meeting these energy and strain conditions requires an orthorhombic, polymodal fault geometry that is similar to natural and experimental fault systems15–20. The application of our formulation to hundreds of rock-mechanics experiments11,21–28 provides a new, comprehensive benchmark for rock-faulting.
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- last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00