Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6444070 | Journal of Asian Earth Sciences | 2015 | 14 Pages |
Abstract
Understanding the electrical properties of rocks is of fundamental interest. We report on currents generated when stresses are applied. Loading the center of gabbro tiles, 30Â ÃÂ 30Â ÃÂ 0.9Â cm3, across a 5Â cm diameter piston, leads to positive currents flowing from the center to the unstressed edges. Changing the constant rate of loading over 5 orders of magnitude from 0.2Â kPa/s to 20Â MPa/s produces positive currents, which start to flow already at low stress levels, <5Â MPa. The currents increase as long as stresses increase. At constant load they flow for hours, days, even weeks and months, slowly decreasing with time. When stresses are removed, they rapidly disappear but can be made to reappear upon reloading. These currents are consistent with the stress-activation of peroxy defects, such as O3Si-OO-SiO3, in the matrix of rock-forming minerals. The peroxy break-up leads to positive holes h, i.e. electronic states associated with Oâ in a matrix of O2â, plus electrons, eâ². Propagating along the upper edge of the valence band, the h are able to flow from stressed to unstressed rock, traveling fast and far by way of a phonon-assisted electron hopping mechanism using energy levels at the upper edge of the valence band. Impacting the tile center leads to h pulses, 4-6Â ms long, flowing outward at â¼100Â m/s at a current equivalent to 1-2Â ÃÂ 109Â A/km3. Electrons, trapped in the broken peroxy bonds, are also mobile, but only within the stressed volume.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geology
Authors
John Scoville, Jaufray Sornette, Friedemann T. Freund,