Competing Controls of Effective Stress Variation and Chloritization on Friction and Stability of Faults in Granite: Implications for Seismicity Triggered by Fluid Injection

Author:

Zhang Fengshou12ORCID,Huang Rui12,An Mengke12ORCID,Min Ki‐Bok3ORCID,Elsworth Derek45ORCID,Hofmann Hannes67ORCID,Wang Xiaoguang89ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geotechnical Engineering College of Civil Engineering Tongji University Shanghai China

2. Key Laboratory of Geotechnical and Underground Engineering of Ministry of Education Tongji University Shanghai China

3. Department of Energy Resources Engineering and Research Institute of Energy and Resources College of Engineering Seoul National University Seoul Republic of Korea

4. Department of Energy and Mineral Engineering EMS Energy Institute and G3 Center The Pennsylvania State University University Park PA USA

5. Department of Geosciences The Pennsylvania State University University Park PA USA

6. Helmholtz Centre Potsdam GFZ‐German Research Center for Geosciences Potsdam Germany

7. Technische Universität Berlin Berlin Germany

8. State Key Laboratory of Oil and Gas Reservoir Geology and Exploitation Chengdu University of Technology Chengdu China

9. Faculty of Land Resource Engineering Kunming University of Science and Technology Kunming China

Abstract

AbstractFluids injection for hydraulic stimulation and fracturing, typical in the development of enhanced geothermal systems (EGS) in granites, can reactivate deep faults and induce seismicity. Such faults typically contain chlorite coatings as an alteration product that may impact styles of deformation—aseismic through seismic. We performed low velocity shear experiments on simulated granite fault gouges under conditions typifying a geothermal reservoir at ∼4‐km depth with a confining pressure of 110 MPa, a temperature of 150°C, fluid pressures of 21–80 MPa, and chlorite contents of 0–100%, to investigate the influence of variation in effective stress and mineral composition on fault strength and stability. Our results show a transition from velocity‐strengthening to velocity‐weakening behavior in simulated granite gouge when the effective confining pressure was reduced from 89 to 30 MPa, characterized by a transition from fault compaction to dilation—as revealed by microstructural observations—with implications in enabling unstable failure. Conversely, increasing chlorite content stabilizes slip but reduces frictional strength. The microstructures of these mixed gouges exhibit shear localized on chlorite‐enriched planes and promoting fault sliding. These results suggest that earthquake ruptures occurring during fluid injection can be facilitated by effective stress variations and that both controlling fluid overpressures (effective stresses) and being aware of the presence of alteration minerals are both important controls in mitigating such injection‐induced seismic risks.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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