Micromechanics of sea ice frictional slip from test basin scale experiments

We have conducted a series of high-resolution friction experiments on large floating saline ice floes in an environmental test basin. In these experiments, a central ice floe was pushed between two other floes, sliding along two interfacial faults. The frictional motion was predominantly stick–slip....

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Main Authors: Sammonds, PR, Hatton, D, Felthan, D
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1527633/1/Sammonds%20micromechanics%20revised%202016%20copy.pdf
https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1527633/
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spelling ftucl:oai:eprints.ucl.ac.uk.OAI2:1527633 2023-12-24T10:14:43+01:00 Micromechanics of sea ice frictional slip from test basin scale experiments Sammonds, PR Hatton, D Felthan, D 2017-02-13 text https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1527633/1/Sammonds%20micromechanics%20revised%202016%20copy.pdf https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1527633/ eng eng https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1527633/1/Sammonds%20micromechanics%20revised%202016%20copy.pdf https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1527633/ open Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences , 375 (2086) , Article 20150354. (2017) Article 2017 ftucl 2023-11-27T13:07:38Z We have conducted a series of high-resolution friction experiments on large floating saline ice floes in an environmental test basin. In these experiments, a central ice floe was pushed between two other floes, sliding along two interfacial faults. The frictional motion was predominantly stick–slip. Shear stresses, normal stresses, local strains and slip displacement were measured along the sliding faults, and acoustic emissions were monitored. High-resolution measurements during a single stick–slip cycle at several positions along the fault allowed us to identify two phases of frictional slip: a nucleation phase, where a nucleation zone begins to slip before the rest of the fault, and a propagation phase when the entire fault is slipping. This is slip-weakening behaviour. We have therefore characterized what we consider to be a key deformation mechanism in Arctic Ocean dynamics. In order to understand the micromechanics of sea ice friction, we have employed a theoretical constitutive relation (i.e. an equation for shear stress in terms of temperature, normal load, acceleration, velocity and slip displacement) derived from the physics of asperity–asperity contact and sliding (Hatton et al. 2009 Phil. Mag. 89, 2771–2799 (doi:10.1080/14786430903113769)). We find that our experimental data conform reasonably with this frictional law once slip weakening is introduced. We find that the constitutive relation follows Archard's law rather than Amontons' law, with Embedded Image (where τ is the shear stress and σn is the normal stress) and n = 26/27, with a fractal asperity distribution, where the frictional shear stress, τ = ffractal Tmlws, where ffractal is the fractal asperity height distribution, Tml is the shear strength for frictional melting and lubrication and ws is the slip weakening. We can therefore deduce that the interfacial faults failed in shear for these experimental conditions through processes of brittle failure of asperities in shear, and, at higher velocities, through frictional heating, localized ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Arctic Ocean Sea ice University College London: UCL Discovery Arctic Arctic Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection University College London: UCL Discovery
op_collection_id ftucl
language English
description We have conducted a series of high-resolution friction experiments on large floating saline ice floes in an environmental test basin. In these experiments, a central ice floe was pushed between two other floes, sliding along two interfacial faults. The frictional motion was predominantly stick–slip. Shear stresses, normal stresses, local strains and slip displacement were measured along the sliding faults, and acoustic emissions were monitored. High-resolution measurements during a single stick–slip cycle at several positions along the fault allowed us to identify two phases of frictional slip: a nucleation phase, where a nucleation zone begins to slip before the rest of the fault, and a propagation phase when the entire fault is slipping. This is slip-weakening behaviour. We have therefore characterized what we consider to be a key deformation mechanism in Arctic Ocean dynamics. In order to understand the micromechanics of sea ice friction, we have employed a theoretical constitutive relation (i.e. an equation for shear stress in terms of temperature, normal load, acceleration, velocity and slip displacement) derived from the physics of asperity–asperity contact and sliding (Hatton et al. 2009 Phil. Mag. 89, 2771–2799 (doi:10.1080/14786430903113769)). We find that our experimental data conform reasonably with this frictional law once slip weakening is introduced. We find that the constitutive relation follows Archard's law rather than Amontons' law, with Embedded Image (where τ is the shear stress and σn is the normal stress) and n = 26/27, with a fractal asperity distribution, where the frictional shear stress, τ = ffractal Tmlws, where ffractal is the fractal asperity height distribution, Tml is the shear strength for frictional melting and lubrication and ws is the slip weakening. We can therefore deduce that the interfacial faults failed in shear for these experimental conditions through processes of brittle failure of asperities in shear, and, at higher velocities, through frictional heating, localized ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Sammonds, PR
Hatton, D
Felthan, D
spellingShingle Sammonds, PR
Hatton, D
Felthan, D
Micromechanics of sea ice frictional slip from test basin scale experiments
author_facet Sammonds, PR
Hatton, D
Felthan, D
author_sort Sammonds, PR
title Micromechanics of sea ice frictional slip from test basin scale experiments
title_short Micromechanics of sea ice frictional slip from test basin scale experiments
title_full Micromechanics of sea ice frictional slip from test basin scale experiments
title_fullStr Micromechanics of sea ice frictional slip from test basin scale experiments
title_full_unstemmed Micromechanics of sea ice frictional slip from test basin scale experiments
title_sort micromechanics of sea ice frictional slip from test basin scale experiments
publishDate 2017
url https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1527633/1/Sammonds%20micromechanics%20revised%202016%20copy.pdf
https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1527633/
geographic Arctic
Arctic Ocean
geographic_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
genre Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Sea ice
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic Ocean
Sea ice
op_source Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences , 375 (2086) , Article 20150354. (2017)
op_relation https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1527633/1/Sammonds%20micromechanics%20revised%202016%20copy.pdf
https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/1527633/
op_rights open
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