Stress, Strain, and Rock Deformation
Stress is the force per unit area applied to rock and strain is the resulting change in shape or size; their relationship determines whether rock bends, flows, or breaks.
Definition
Stress is the distribution of forces acting on a body per unit area, strain is the measurable deformation produced, and rock deformation is the process by which rocks change shape or volume in response to stress through elastic, ductile, or brittle behavior.
Scope
This topic covers the mechanical concepts that underlie all geological structures: the stress tensor and its principal axes, types of strain, the elastic, plastic, and brittle regimes, and the deformation mechanisms by which rocks accommodate strain at different depths. It is the mechanical foundation for interpreting folds and faults.
Core questions
- How is the state of stress in rock described and resolved onto a plane?
- What distinguishes elastic, plastic, and brittle responses?
- What controls the depth of the brittle–ductile transition?
Key theories
- Mohr–Coulomb failure
- Brittle failure of rock occurs when shear stress on a plane overcomes the rock's cohesion plus frictional resistance, a criterion that predicts the orientation of faults relative to the principal stresses.
- Byerlee's law of rock friction
- Byerlee found that the frictional strength of most rocks follows a simple, nearly rock-independent relationship between shear and normal stress, providing a robust upper bound on the strength of faults in the brittle crust.
Mechanisms
Under low temperature and pressure, rock first deforms elastically and then fails by fracture once stress exceeds its strength. With increasing depth, higher confining pressure and temperature suppress fracturing and enable ductile mechanisms such as dislocation creep, diffusion creep, and pressure solution, producing continuous flow. The transition between these regimes, the brittle–ductile transition, typically occurs at mid-crustal depths.
Clinical relevance
Quantifying rock strength and the in-situ stress field is essential for designing stable tunnels, mines, and boreholes, for predicting fault behavior in seismic hazard analysis, and for understanding induced seismicity from fluid injection.
History
The mechanics of failure draw on Coulomb's eighteenth-century friction work and Mohr's graphical stress analysis. Twentieth-century experimental rock mechanics, including Byerlee's friction studies, quantified how rock strength varies with confining pressure, temperature, and strain rate, linking laboratory results to crustal deformation.
Key figures
- James Byerlee
- Charles-Augustin de Coulomb
- Otto Mohr
Related topics
Seminal works
- byerlee1978
Frequently asked questions
- What is the difference between stress and strain?
- Stress is the force per unit area applied to a rock, while strain is the resulting deformation, such as stretching, shortening, or shearing. Stress is the cause and strain is the measurable effect.