scholarly journals Quantifying the Porosity of Crystalline Rocks by In Situ and Laboratory Injection Methods

Minerals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 1072
Author(s):  
Andreas Möri ◽  
Martin Mazurek ◽  
Kunio Ota ◽  
Marja Siitari-Kauppi ◽  
Florian Eichinger ◽  
...  

The porosity and pore geometry of rock samples from a coherent granodioritic rock body at the Grimsel Test Site in Switzerland was characterised by different methods using injection techniques. Results from in situ and laboratory techniques are compared by applying innovative in situ resin impregnation techniques as well as rock impregnation and mercury injection under laboratory conditions. In situ resin impregnation of the rock matrix shows an interconnected pore network throughout the rock body, consisting mainly of grain-boundary pores and solution pores in magmatic feldspar, providing an important reservoir for pore water and solutes, accessible by diffusion. Porosity and pore connectivity do not vary as a function of distance to brittle shear zones. In situ porosity was found to be about 0.3 vol.%, which is about half the porosity value that was determined based on rock samples in the laboratory. Samples that were dried and impregnated in the laboratory were affected by artefacts created since core recovery, and thus showed higher porosity values than samples impregnated under in situ conditions. The extrapolation of laboratory measurements to in situ conditions requires great care and may not be feasible in all cases.

1981 ◽  
Vol 6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dana Isherwood ◽  
Ellen Raber ◽  
Randolph Stone

ABSTRACTRadionuclide migration experiments in fractured granite at the Climax Stock, Nevada Test Site, are needed to compare field and laboratory measured retardation factors to determine whether laboratory studies accurately reflect in situ conditions. Initial field activities have concentrated on hydrological investigations to determine whether the fractures in Climax granite are suitable for migration experiments. A critical question was whether we could isolate a single vertical fracture between two boreholes and establish flow along that fracture from an upper to a lower borehole. Of the ten fractures tested, one fracture would not take water at pressures up to 200 psig for 24 hours. Several fractures were so permeable they accepted water at a rate which exceeded the pumping capacity of the equipment. Other fractures failed to show a connection between the two boreholes. In two fractures, we were able to establish a circulating system with up to 95 percent of the injected water being recovered. Constant pressure injection tests were conducted. Intrinsic permeabilities of 33 and 75 (μm)2 were estimated using a radial nonsteady flow model. These values correspond to effective fracture apertures of 20 and 30 μm respectively. Concurrent with the hydraulic testing activities is a study of the Climax ground-water chemistry. Our analyses show the natural water to be very different in composition from the granite equilibrated water used in laboratory sorption studies. This paper includes the results of the hydrogeological and geochemical investigations, and describes the overall experimental design plans for the radionuclide migration experiments.


Geophysics ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 63 (4) ◽  
pp. 1363-1370 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Bühnemann ◽  
Klaus Holliger

In August 1995, various high‐frequency seismic sources were tested at the Grimsel Test Site (GTS), located inside a crystalline rock body in the central Swiss Alps. These source tests were designed to facilitate future tomographic studies of potential radioactive waste disposal sites. The principal objective was to identify borehole and tunnel seismic sources capable of generating powerful high‐frequency signals such that frequencies up to 1000 Hz can be observed over distances of 1000 m in crystalline or consolidated sedimentary rocks. Seismic sources were situated in water‐filled boreholes (sparker, two piezoelectric sources, explosives) and at or near the tunnel wall (accelerated weight drop, minivibrator, bolt gun, buffalo gun, explosives). To evaluate and compare the source characteristics, the direct P-wave generated by the various seismic sources was investigated for the decay of its S/N and dominant frequency with offset and for the maximum distance at which first arrivals could be picked. Of the seismic sources tested, small explosive charges (5–100 g) had the most favorable S/N and frequency characteristics. At GTS, the target distance (∼1000 m) was reached with explosive charges of 50 g or more. None of the sources tested was capable of generating signals that sustained frequencies of 1000 Hz over distances in excess of 100 to 200 m. The unusually strong attenuation implied by this observation is likely due to the fact that the rocks at GTS underwent brittle deformation during the Alpine orogeny and therefore contain numerous fractures and shear zones.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katrin Kieling ◽  
Simona Regenspurg ◽  
Károly Kovács ◽  
Zsombor Fekete ◽  
Alberto Sánchez Miravalles ◽  
...  

<p>Most problems in deep geothermal operations are related to the chemistry of the geothermal fluid, which might cause deleterious physical and chemical reactions such as degassing and mineral precipitation or corrosion. However, data related the fluid properties are still scarce, largely as a consequence of the difficulty in determining these properties at in situ geothermal conditions, and the fact that those data are scattered across countries and often the “property” of commercial operators of geothermal power plants.</p><p>The EU H2020 project REFLECT aims to collect existing and new data on geothermal fluids across Europe through field measurements, detailed lab experiments simulating in situ conditions, and by calculations. These data will be implemented in case-specific predictive models simulating reactions at geothermal sites, as well as in a European geothermal Fluid Atlas.</p><p>To harmonize the metadata information for different fluid samples, REFLECT partners plan to register IGSNs (International Geo Sample Numbers) for fluid and reservoir rock samples collected and analysed within the project. The IGSN is a unique sample identifier, i.e. it is the equivalent to a DOI for publications. It was originally developed for drill cores and extended for various sample types, including fluid samples (seawater, river or lake water, hydrothermal fluids, porewater). Registration of fluid and rock samples with an IGSN will help to allow making the data accessible and re-usable even if the fluid sample itself is destroyed.</p><p>All data produced and collected within REFLECT form the base of the European Geothermal Fluid Atlas, which will include query and filtering tools to explore the database with a GIS based map visualization. The Atlas makes the data accessible to the geothermal community and the general public. The aim is to create a database, which can easily be integrated into other databases, such that the Fluid Atlas can be an addition to already existing initiatives of geological data collection.</p>


1997 ◽  
Vol 506 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Russell Alexander ◽  
Christoph Bühler ◽  
Hannes Dollinger ◽  
Bernhard Frieg ◽  
Paul Haag ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTTraditional in situ tracer tests estimate contaminant retardation by analysis of the degree and form of tracer breakthrough after transport through the rock. Unfortunately, this approach does not allow direct examination of in situ retardation mechanisms and, in the case of strongly retarded radionuclides, is highly impractical as tracer breakthrough may take months to decades. An alternative method to study retardation is therefore required in such a case and Nagra and PNC have recently employed one such variant to study radionuclide transport in fractured crystalline rock. Here, direct, detailed, examination of in situ radionuclide retardation following tracer injection is carried out by immobilising and recovering the intact fracture and associated rock matrix [1,2].The material can then be studied in the laboratory by standard surface analytical and radiochemical methods and the degree and form of radionuclide uptake can be readily assessed.As part of this work, Nagra and PNC have invested significant effort over the last four years in developing appropriate means of immobilising water-conducting fractures and undisturbed low porosity crystalline rock matrix in a manner which minimises physico-chemical disturbance[3]. After examining a range of options, it was decided to employ in situ resin impregnation as the immobilisation medium as this produced the best results with respect to minimising physico-chemical disturbance of the system while at the same time ensuring impregnation of very fine water saturated pore space. In addition, the polymerised resins improve the rigidity and strength of the rock such that the water saturated structures (pores, fractures or fault gouges) survive the subsequent overcoring and sub-sampling.Two experiments will be discussed: the first has been recently completed in Nagra's underground laboratory in the central Swiss Alps (the Grimsel Test Site, or GTS) and the second is currently ongoing at PNC's Kamaishi In Situ Test Site (KTS) in north-east Japan.In the GTS, retardation of radionuclides is being studied in the Radionuclide Retardation Project (RRP) and two resins have been formulated for different aspects of the study. An epoxy resin has been injected into a complex water-conducting shear zone in a granodiorite following the injection of a cocktail of strongly retarding radionuclides (including 60Co, 237Np, 234. 235U, 99Tc, 152Eu, 113Sn and 75Se [1,2]). To negate the hydrophobic nature of the epoxy resin, a trick has been imported from soil science where isopropanol is first injected to replace the water and only then is the epoxy resin injected. Laboratory tests showed that neither the isopropanol nor the resin should disturb the in situ radionuclide distribution, a result which has since been verified in the field. In parallel with this work, the low porosity (<1%) granodiorite rock matrix behind the shear zone is being examined by means of an in situ injection of an acrylic resin. The very low viscosity of the specially developed acrylic resin allows impregnation (and subsequent visualisation) of the connected microporosity of the matrix, so allowing detailed in situ examination of the depth of available matrix behind the shear zone.These methods have been further refined in the KTS and are currently being applied to several different types of water conducting features. The form and type of connected porosity in the associated granodioritic rock matrix is also being examined in detail [4]. As with the GTS work, the results of the in situ experiments will be compared with laboratory data on retardation and matrix diffusion to assess the transferability of the large volume of laboratory data to the field.The development of the various resins will be discussed along with the applicability of these specially developed resins to other rock types. Finally, the results of the recently concluded GTS tests and the ongoing KTS tests will be presented.


2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 64
Author(s):  
Maija Nuppunen-Puputti ◽  
Riikka Kietäväinen ◽  
Lotta Purkamo ◽  
Pauliina Rajala ◽  
Merja Itävaara ◽  
...  

Fungi have an important role in nutrient cycling in most ecosystems on Earth, yet their ecology and functionality in deep continental subsurface remain unknown. Here, we report the first observations of active fungal colonization of mica schist in the deep continental biosphere and the ability of deep subsurface fungi to attach to rock surfaces under in situ conditions in groundwater at 500 and 967 m depth in Precambrian bedrock. We present an in situ subsurface biofilm trap, designed to reveal sessile microbial communities on rock surface in deep continental groundwater, using Outokumpu Deep Drill Hole, in eastern Finland, as a test site. The observed fungal phyla in Outokumpu subsurface were Basidiomycota, Ascomycota, and Mortierellomycota. In addition, significant proportion of the community represented unclassified Fungi. Sessile fungal communities on mica schist surfaces differed from the planktic fungal communities. The main bacterial phyla were Firmicutes, Proteobacteria, and Actinobacteriota. Biofilm formation on rock surfaces is a slow process and our results indicate that fungal and bacterial communities dominate the early surface attachment process, when pristine mineral surfaces are exposed to deep subsurface ecosystems. Various fungi showed statistically significant cross-kingdom correlation with both thiosulfate and sulfate reducing bacteria, e.g., SRB2 with fungi Debaryomyces hansenii.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio Pol ◽  
Fabio Gabrieli ◽  
Lorenzo Brezzi

AbstractIn this work, the mechanical response of a steel wire mesh panel against a punching load is studied starting from laboratory test conditions and extending the results to field applications. Wire meshes anchored with bolts and steel plates are extensively used in rockfall protection and slope stabilization. Their performances are evaluated through laboratory tests, but the mechanical constraints, the geometry and the loading conditions may strongly differ from the in situ conditions leading to incorrect estimations of the strength of the mesh. In this work, the discrete element method is used to simulate a wire mesh. After validation of the numerical mesh model against experimental data, the punching behaviour of an anchored mesh panel is investigated in order to obtain a more realistic characterization of the mesh mechanical response in field conditions. The dimension of the punching element, its position, the anchor plate size and the anchor spacing are varied, providing analytical relationships able to predict the panel response in different loading conditions. Furthermore, the mesh panel aspect ratio is analysed showing the existence of an optimal value. The results of this study can provide useful information to practitioners for designing secured drapery systems, as well as for the assessment of their safety conditions.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1665 ◽  
pp. 85-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josep M. Soler ◽  
Jiri Landa ◽  
Vaclava Havlova ◽  
Yukio Tachi ◽  
Takanori Ebina ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTMatrix diffusion is a key process for radionuclide retention in crystalline rocks. Within the LTD project (Long-Term Diffusion), an in-situ diffusion experiment in unaltered non-fractured granite was performed at the Grimsel Test Site (www.grimsel.com, Switzerland). The tracers included 3H as HTO, 22Na+, 134Cs+ and 131I- with stable I- as carrier.The dataset (except for 131I- because of complete decay) was analyzed with different diffusion-sorption models by different teams (NAGRA / IDAEA-CSIC, UJV-Rez, JAEA, Univ. Poitiers) using different codes, with the goal of obtaining effective diffusion coefficients (De) and porosity (ϕ) or rock capacity (α) values. A Borehole Disturbed Zone (BDZ), which was observed in the rock profile data for 22Na+ and 134Cs+, had to be taken into account to fit the experimental observations. The extension of the BDZ (1-2 mm) was about the same magnitude as the mean grain size of the quartz and feldspar grains.De and α values for the different tracers in the BDZ are larger than the respective values in the bulk rock. Capacity factors in the bulk rock are largest for Cs+ (strong sorption) and smallest for 3H (no sorption). However, 3H seems to display large α values in the BDZ. This phenomenon will be investigated in more detail in a second test starting in 2013.


2004 ◽  
Vol 83 (1) ◽  
pp. 109-118 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Holownia ◽  
M.S. Chinnan ◽  
A.E. Reynolds ◽  
JW Davis

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