4.1 Article

Study of the Nankai seismogenic fault using dynamic wave propagation modelling of digital rock from the Nobeoka Fault

Journal

EXPLORATION GEOPHYSICS
Volume 49, Issue 1, Pages 11-20

Publisher

CSIRO PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1071/EG17129

Keywords

earthquake; fractures; modelling; rock physics; wave propagation

Funding

  1. Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA)
  2. I2CNER - World Premier International Research Center Initiative (WPI), MEXT, Japan
  3. JSPS [JP15H01143, JP17H05318, JP15H02988, JP15H05717]
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17H05318, 15H02988] Funding Source: KAKEN

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To understand the characteristics of the Nankai seismogenic fault in the plate convergent margin, we calculated the P-and S-wave velocities (V-P and V-S) of digital rock models constructed from core samples of an ancient plate boundary fault at Nobeoka, Kyushu Island, Japan. We first constructed 3D digital rock models from microcomputed tomography images and identified their heterogeneous textures such as cracks and veins. We replaced the cracks and veins with air, water, quartz, calcite and other materials with different bulk and shear moduli. Using the Rotated Staggered Grid Finite-Difference Method, we performed dynamic wave propagation simulations and quantified the effective V-P, V-S and the ratio of V-P to VS (V-P/V-S) of the 3D digital rock models with different crack-filling minerals. Our results demonstrate that the water-saturated cracks considerably decreased the seismic velocity and increased V-P/V-S. The V-P/V-S of the quartz-filled rock model was lower than that in the water-saturated case and in the calcite-filled rock model. By comparing the elastic properties derived from the digital rock models with the seismic velocities (e.g. V-P and V-P/V-S) around the seismogenic fault estimated from field seismic data, we characterised the evolution process of the deep seismogenic fault. The high V-P/V-S and low V-P observed at the transition from aseismic to coseismic regimes in the Nankai Trough can be explained by open cracks (or fractures), while the low V-P/V-S and high V-P observed at the deeper coseismic fault zone suggests quartz-filled cracks. The quartz-rich fault zone characterised as low V-P/V-S and high V-P in this study could partially relate to the coseismic behaviour as suggested by previous studies, because quartz exhibits slip-weakening behaviour (i.e. unstable coseismic slip).

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