Abstract
During subduction, the downgoing oceanic crust is exposed to high temperatures in the mantle wedge, causing volatile‐bearing minerals to break down and release hydrous fluids into the forearc. These fluids percolate upwards, reacting with the mantle wedge to form hydrated ultramafic lithologies, including serpentinite. To accurately track the fate and impact of water on the forearc, we develop time‐dependent models that self‐consistently capture both serpentinite ingrowth and the associated rheological weakening of the plate interface. Unlike many subduction models that investigate forearc serpentinization and prescribe plate velocities, geometries, or steady‐state conditions, our approach allows plates to evolve dynamically without predefined velocities or geometries. During subduction infancy, serpentinite accumulates rapidly. As subduction matures, serpentinite ingrowth decreases, and more serpentinite is also dragged downward by the slab. To elucidate the links between subduction dynamics and serpentinization, we consider variations in serpentinite strength and hydration state of the incoming plate. Subducting fully water‐saturated sediments yield ∼3× greater forearc serpentinite than within the moderately hydrated reference case. The water‐saturated case produces a weaker interface and, in turn, subduction zone convergence rates ∼40% higher than in an endmember case with anhydrous sediment. A lower serpentinite strength also produces higher convergence rates despite more downdragging of serpentinite from the forearc. We find that hydrous sediments not only lubricate the interface directly by weakening it, as previously suggested, but also by dehydrating and releasing water that produces weak serpentinite in the mantle wedge, with such feedback only able to be captured within fully coupled dynamic models.