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Journal Article

Anisotropic thermal conductivity of antigorite along slab subduction impacts seismicity of intermediate-depth earthquakes

Authors

Chien,  Yu-Hsiang
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/marzotto

Marzotto,  Enrico
3.6 Chemistry and Physics of Earth Materials, 3.0 Geochemistry, Departments, GFZ Publication Database, Deutsches GeoForschungsZentrum;

Tsao,  Yi-Chi
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Hsieh,  Wen-Pin
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5026484.pdf
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Citation

Chien, Y.-H., Marzotto, E., Tsao, Y.-C., Hsieh, W.-P. (2024): Anisotropic thermal conductivity of antigorite along slab subduction impacts seismicity of intermediate-depth earthquakes. - Nature Communications, 15, 5198.
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-49418-3


Cite as: https://gfzpublic.gfz-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_5026484
Abstract
Double seismic zones (DSZs) are a feature of some subducting slabs, where intermediate-depth earthquakes (~70–300 km) align along two separate planes. The upper seismic plane is generally attributed to dehydration embrittlement, whereas mechanisms forming the lower seismic plane are still debated. Thermal conductivity of slab minerals is expected to control the temperature evolution of subducting slabs, and therefore their seismicity. However, effects of the potential anisotropic thermal conductivity of layered serpentine minerals with crystal preferred orientation on slab’s thermal evolution remain poorly understood. Here we measure the lattice thermal conductivity of antigorite, a hydrous serpentine mineral, along its crystallographic b- and c-axis at relevant high pressure-temperature conditions of subduction. We find that antigorite’s thermal conductivity along the c-axis is ~3–4 folds smaller than the b-axis.Our numericalmodels further reveal thatwhen the lowthermal-conductivity c-axis is aligned normal to the slab dip, antigorite’s strongly anisotropic thermal conductivity enables heating at the top portion of the slab, facilitating dehydration embrittlement that causes the seismicity in the upper plane of DSZs. Potentially, the antigorite’s thermal insulating effect also hinders the dissipation of frictional heat inside shear zones, promoting thermal runaway along serpentinized faults that could trigger intermediatedepth earthquakes.