Experimental and Numerical Investigations of the Dynamic Permeability Evolution of a Fracture in Granite During Shearing Under Different Normal Stress Conditions

2020 ◽  
Vol 53 (10) ◽  
pp. 4429-4447 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haimeng Shen ◽  
Qiang Zhang ◽  
Qi Li ◽  
Xiaochun Li ◽  
Lu Shi ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Vol 12 (10) ◽  
pp. 3333-3353 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philipp Mamot ◽  
Samuel Weber ◽  
Tanja Schröder ◽  
Michael Krautblatter

Abstract. Instability and failure of high mountain rock slopes have significantly increased since the 1990s coincident with climatic warming and are expected to rise further. Most of the observed failures in permafrost-affected rock walls are likely triggered by the mechanical destabilisation of warming bedrock permafrost including ice-filled joints. The failure of ice-filled rock joints has only been observed in a small number of experiments, often using concrete as a rock analogue. Here, we present a systematic study of the brittle shear failure of ice and rock–ice interfaces, simulating the accelerating phase of rock slope failure. For this, we performed 141 shearing experiments with rock–ice–rock “sandwich”' samples at constant strain rates (10−3 s−1) provoking ice fracturing, under normal stress conditions ranging from 100 to 800 kPa, representing 4–30 m of rock overburden, and at temperatures from −10 to −0.5 ∘C, typical for recent observed rock slope failures in alpine permafrost. To create close to natural but reproducible conditions, limestone sample surfaces were ground to international rock mechanical standard roughness. Acoustic emission (AE) was successfully applied to describe the fracturing behaviour, anticipating rock–ice failure as all failures are predated by an AE hit increase with peaks immediately prior to failure. We demonstrate that both the warming and unloading (i.e. reduced overburden) of ice-filled rock joints lead to a significant drop in shear resistance. With a temperature increase from −10 to −0.5 ∘C, the shear stress at failure reduces by 64 %–78 % for normal stresses of 100–400 kPa. At a given temperature, the shear resistance of rock–ice interfaces decreases with decreasing normal stress. This can lead to a self-enforced rock slope failure propagation: as soon as a first slab has detached, further slabs become unstable through progressive thermal propagation and possibly even faster by unloading. Here, we introduce a new Mohr–Coulomb failure criterion for ice-filled rock joints that is valid for joint surfaces, which we assume similar for all rock types, and which applies to temperatures from −8 to −0.5 ∘C and normal stresses from 100 to 400 kPa. It contains temperature-dependent friction and cohesion, which decrease by 12 % ∘C−1 and 10 % ∘C−1 respectively due to warming and it applies to temperature and stress conditions of more than 90 % of the recently documented accelerating failure phases in permafrost rock walls.


2022 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 12
Author(s):  
Yin Zeng ◽  
Lu Wang ◽  
Chaofu Deng ◽  
Qiangxing Zhang ◽  
Zhide Wu ◽  
...  

Geofluids ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Yuan Wang ◽  
Yu Jiao ◽  
Shaobin Hu

The progressive shear failure of a rock mass under hydromechanical coupling is a key aspect of the long-term stability of deeply buried, high fluid pressure diversion tunnels. In this study, we use experimental and numerical analysis to quantify the permeability variations that occur in an intact marble sample as it evolves from shear failure to shear slip under different confining pressures and fluid pressures. The experimental results reveal that at low effective normal stress, the fracture permeability is positively correlated with the shear displacement. The permeability is lower at higher effective normal stress and exhibits an episodic change with increasing shear displacement. After establishing a numerical model based on the point cloud data generated by the three-dimensional (3D) laser scanning of the fracture surfaces, we found that there are some contact areas that block the percolation channels under high effective stress conditions. This type of contact area plays a key role in determining the evolution of the fracture permeability in a given rock sample.


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 2677
Author(s):  
Zetian Zhang ◽  
Ru Zhang ◽  
Zhiguo Cao ◽  
Mingzhong Gao ◽  
Yong Zhang ◽  
...  

The gas permeability and mechanical properties of coal, which are seriously influenced by mining-induced stress evolution and gas pressure conditions, are key issues in coal mining and enhanced coalbed methane recovery. To obtain a comprehensive understanding of the effects of mining-induced stress conditions and gas pressures on the mechanical behavior and permeability evolution of coal, a series of mining-induced stress unloading experiments at different gas pressures were conducted. The test results are compared with the results of conventional triaxial compression tests also conducted at different gas pressures, and the different mechanisms between these two methods were theoretically analyzed. The test results show that under the same mining-induced stress conditions, the strength of the coal mass decreases with increasing gas pressure, while the absolute deformation of the coal mass increases. Under real mining-induced stress conditions, the volumetric strain of the coal mass remains negative, which means that the volume of the coal mass continues to increase. The volumetric strain corresponding to the peak stress of the coal mass increases with gas pressure in the same mining layout simulation. However, in conventional triaxial compression tests, the coal mass volume continues to decrease and in a compressional state, and there is no obvious deformation stage that occurs during the mining-induced stress unloading tests. The theoretical and experimental analyses show that mining-induced stress unloading and gas pressure changes greatly impact the deformation, failure mechanism and permeability enhancement of coal.


2021 ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Kelvin Abaa ◽  
John Wang ◽  
Derek Elsworth ◽  
Mku Ityokumbul

Summary Fracturing fluid filtrate that leaks off during injection is imbibed by strong capillary forces present in low-permeability sandstones and may severely reduce the effective gas permeability during cleanup and post-fracture production. This work aims to investigate the role fracturing fluid filtrate from slickwater has on rock-fluid and fluid-fluid interactions and to quantify the resulting multiphase permeability evolution during imbibition and drainage of the filtrate by means of specialized core laboratory techniques. Three suites of experiments were conducted. In the first suite of experiments, a fluid leakoff test was conducted on selected core samples to determine the extent of polymer invasion and leakoff characteristics. In the second suite, multigas relative permeability measurements were conducted on sandstone plugs saturated with fracturing fluid filtrate. A combination of controlled fluid evaporation and pulse decay permeability technique was used to measure liquid and gas effective permeabilities for both drainage and imbibition cycles. These experiments aim to capture dynamic permeability evolution during invasion and cleanup of fracturing fluid (slickwater). The final suite of experiments consists of adsorption flow tests to investigate, identify, and quantify possible mechanisms for adsorption of the polymeric molecules of friction reducers present in the fluid filtrate to the pore walls of the rock sample. Imbibition tests and observations of contact angles were conducted to validate possible wettability changes. Results from multiphase permeability flow tests show an irreversible reduction in endpoint brine permeability and relative permeability with increasing concentration of friction reducer. Our results also show that effective gas permeability during drainage/cleanup of the imbibed slickwater fluid is controlled to a large degree by trapped gas saturation than by changes in interfacial tension. Adsorption flow tests identified adsorption of polymeric molecules of the friction reducer present in the fluid to the pore walls of the rock. The adsorption friction reducer increases the wettability of the rock surface and results in the reduction of liquid relative permeability. The originality of this work is to diagnose formation damage mechanisms from laboratory experiments that adequately capture multiphase permeability evolution specific to a slickwater fluid system, during imbibition and cleanup. This will be useful in optimizing fracturing fluid selection.


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