Buoyancy-driven fluid fracture: the effects of material toughness and of low-viscosity precursors

When buoyant fluid is released into the base of a crack in an elastic medjura the crack will propagate upwards, driven by the buoyancy of the fluid. Viscous fluid flow in such a fissure is described by the equations of lubrication theory with the pressure given by the sum of the hydrostatic pressure of the fluid and the elastic pressures exerted by the walls of the crack. The elastic pressure and the width of the crack are further coupled by an integro-differential equation derived from the theory of infinitesimal dislocations in an elastic medium. The steady buoyancy-driven propagation of a two-dimensional fluid-filled crack through an elastic medium is analysed and the governing equations for the pressure distribution and the shape of the crack are solved numerically using a collocation technique. The fluid pressure in the tip of an opening crack is shown to be very low. Accordingly, a region of relatively inviscid vapour or exsolved volatiles in the crack tip is predicted and allowed for in the formulation of the problem. The solutions show that the asymptotic width of the crack, its rate of ascent and the general features of the flow are determined primarily by the fluid mechanics; the strength of the medium and the vapour pressure in the crack tip affect only the local structure near the advancing tip of the crack. When applied to the transport of molten rock through the Earth's lithosphere by magma-fracture, this conclusion is of fundamental importance and challenges the geophysicist's usual emphasis on the controlling influence of fracture mechanics rather than that of fluid mechanics.

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