rock anisotropy
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2021 ◽  
Vol 921 (1) ◽  
pp. 012072
Author(s):  
A Yaqin ◽  
Djamaluddin ◽  
N F Qaidahiyani

Abstract Mining activities in open pit and underground mines will always be associated with rock breaking or stripping activities (both mechanical and blasting), so that this can affect the structure and strength of rocks. The strength of the rock is strongly influenced by the presence of initial cracks (pre-existing cracks) and rock anisotropy conditions associated with discontinuous plane conditions. Fracture mechanics is a science that illustrates how a fracture can occur and propagate during applied stress on material. The main parameter in fracture mechanics is called fracture toughness which shows the resistance of the material to propagate the crack. There are several mode in determining type I fracture toughness, one of which is type I fracture toughness Flattened Brazilian Disc (FBD) mode. Type I fracture toughness test is carried out using a compression machine in a laboratory and is conducted on concrete samples consisting of 3 (three) various samples, with a ratio of cement and sand composition of 1:1, 1:2, and 2:1. This test also uses different loading rate values, namely 2.50 mm/min, 2.70 mm/min, and 2.83 mm/min. The results of the type I fracture toughness value from each loading rate will be compared to determine the effect of the loading rate on the value of type I fracture toughness. The obtained fracture toughness value is also related to the physical and mechanical properties of the samples. Based on the results of tests, it can be seen that the loading rate affects the value of fracture toughness, the increase in fracture toughness value is followed by the higher loading rate. In addition, it can be seen that the fracture toughness value is directly proportional to the uniaxial compressive strength value and the indirect tensile strength value. The average correlation value obtained is R2 = 0.9884 (indicating a strong relationship).


2021 ◽  
Vol 921 (1) ◽  
pp. 012059
Author(s):  
P S Ahdi ◽  
A Akil ◽  
M Ramli

Abstract Mining activities in open pit and underground mines will always be associated with rock breaking or stripping activities (both mechanical and blasting), so that this can affect the structure and strength of rocks. The strength of the rock is strongly influenced by the presence of initial cracks (pre-existing cracks) and rock anisotropy conditions associated with discontinuous plane conditions. Fracture mechanics is a science that illustrates how a fracture can occur and propagate during applied stress on material. The main parameter in fracture mechanics is called fracture toughness which shows the resistance of the material to propagate the crack. There are several mode in determining type I fracture toughness, one of which is type I fracture toughness Flattened Brazilian Disc (FBD) mode. Type I fracture toughness test is carried out using a compression machine in a laboratory and is conducted on concrete samples consisting of 3 (three) various samples, with a ratio of cement and sand composition of 1:1, 1:2, and 2:1. This test also uses different loading rate values, namely 2.50 mm/min, 2.70 mm/min, and 2.83 mm/min. The results of the type I fracture toughness value from each loading rate will be compared to determine the effect of the loading rate on the value of type I fracture toughness. The obtained fracture toughness value is also related to the physical and mechanical properties of the samples. Based on the results of tests, it can be seen that the loading rate affects the value of fracture toughness, the increase in fracture toughness value is followed by the higher loading rate. In addition, it can be seen that the fracture toughness value is directly proportional to the uniaxial compressive strength value and the indirect tensile strength value. The average correlation value obtained is R2 = 0.9884 (indicating a strong relationship).


2021 ◽  
Vol 921 (1) ◽  
pp. 012084
Author(s):  
B Hidayah ◽  
A Jaya ◽  
A I D Puspita ◽  
B R M

Abstract Mining activities in open pit and underground mines will always be associated with rock breaking or stripping activities (both mechanical and blasting), so that this can affect the structure and strength of rocks. The strength of the rock is strongly influenced by the presence of initial cracks (pre-existing cracks) and rock anisotropy conditions associated with discontinuous plane conditions. Fracture mechanics is a science that illustrates how a fracture can occur and propagate during applied stress on material. The main parameter in fracture mechanics is called fracture toughness which shows the resistance of the material to propagate the crack. There are several mode in determining type I fracture toughness, one of which is type I fracture toughness Flattened Brazilian Disc (FBD) mode. Type I fracture toughness test is carried out using a compression machine in a laboratory and is conducted on concrete samples consisting of 3 (three) various samples, with a ratio of cement and sand composition of 1:1, 1:2, and 2:1. This test also uses different loading rate values, namely 2.50 mm/min, 2.70 mm/min, and 2.83 mm/min. The results of the type I fracture toughness value from each loading rate will be compared to determine the effect of the loading rate on the value of type I fracture toughness. The obtained fracture toughness value is also related to the physical and mechanical properties of the samples. Based on the results of tests, it can be seen that the loading rate affects the value of fracture toughness, the increase in fracture toughness value is followed by the higher loading rate. In addition, it can be seen that the fracture toughness value is directly proportional to the uniaxial compressive strength value and the indirect tensile strength value. The average correlation value obtained is R2 = 0.9884 (indicating a strong relationship).


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andres Gonzalez ◽  
◽  
Mehdi Teymouri ◽  
Zoya Heidari ◽  
Olivier Lopez ◽  
...  

Spatial anisotropy and heterogeneity in petrophysical properties can significantly affect formation evaluation of hydrocarbon bearing formations. A common example is permeability anisotropy, which is a consequence of the depositional mechanisms of sediments. Additionally, the variation in spatial distribution of rock components and the effect of post-depositional processes on the physical and chemical structure of the rock constituents can strongly impact the directional dependency of petrophysical, electrical, and elastic properties. Therefore, image-based quantification of spatial distribution of rock constituents can be used for anisotropy evaluation. Assessment of anisotropy has been previously accomplished through use of pore-scale images. However, the discrete nature of this images gives a narrow picture of anisotropy in larger scales. Whole-core computed tomography (CT) scan images, despite revealing the distribution of rock components at a coarser scale, provide a continuous medium for anisotropy estimation. Assessment of anisotropy using three-dimensional (3D) CT-scan data and incorporation of that information in well-log-based formation evaluation is, however, not widely studied or practiced in the petroleum industry. The objectives of this paper are (a) to develop a method to quantify anisotropy utilizing whole-core 3D CT-scan image stacks, (b) to provide a semi-continuous measure of rock anisotropy, and (c) to show the value of the proposed method by means of estimation of directional-dependent elastic properties. First, we pre-process the raw whole-core CT-scan images to remove undesired image artifacts and to generate an image containing pixels representing only the recovered core material. Then, we segment each whole-core CT-scan image stack into distinctive phases. Then, we conduct numerical simulations of electric potential distribution in conjunction with streamline tracing techniques to quantify the electrical tortuosity of the continuous phase in each cartesian direction. We employed the tortuosity distribution values in each direction as a measure of rock anisotropy. Finally, we use a simulation model to estimate direction-dependent elastic properties. We applied the introduced method to dual energy whole-core CT-scan image stacks acquired in a siliciclastic depth interval. Estimates of rock anisotropy obtained using the proposed method agreed with the observed visual distribution of the segmented phase and the observed heterogeneity in available slabbed whole-core photos and 2D CT-scan images. Additionally, estimation of directional-dependent elastic properties demonstrated the value of the proposed method. Anisotropy results coincided with directional-dependent estimation of elastic properties. We observed measurable anisotropy in the 3D CT-scan image stacks, which is important to be quantitatively taken into account in petrophysical/ mechanical evaluation of this formation. A unique contribution of the proposed workflow is the use of core-scale image data for anisotropy estimation and the continuous nature of the anisotropy estimates when compared with workflows employing only pore-scale image data. It should also be noted that the proposed method can potentially be employed to identify the optimum locations to acquire core plugs for further assessment of rock anisotropy.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Morteza Nejati ◽  
Mahsa Sakha ◽  
Bahador Bahrami ◽  
Saeid Ghouli ◽  
Majid R. Ayatollahi ◽  
...  

<p>Accurate predictions of fracture growth path resulted from fluid injection in subsurface is an important topic in geoscience projects such as wastewater injection, CO2 sequestration and geothermal energy extraction. Pressurised fluid not only creates new fractures in form of hydraulic fractures, but also potentially propagates pre-existing ones. A precise assessment of fracture growth path is pivotal in characterising the connectivity of the fracture network, and as a result, the hydraulic response of the rock volume. Numerical modelling provides a strong platform to help better understand fracture growth path during hydraulic stimulations. Despite significant progress in the computational power and advanced numerical algorithms in recent years, the numerical simulation of fracture growth still faces many challenges. Some of these challenges are related to the robustness of the numerical schemes used to model evolving fractures. The development of methods such as extended finite element and phase-field have greatly helped in recent years to tackle the evolution of fractures in complex trajectories. A second group of challenges is related to the development of accurate fracturing laws and their implementation into numerical codes in order to obtain realistic fracture growth trajectories. In this paper, we address some of the challenges in the second group and share our findings on how we can more accurately predict fracture path in subsurface. At first, we present our evaluation of the measured values of the fracture toughness in laboratory, and discuss why those values are mostly underestimating fracture toughness in rock masses. We then introduce a method to correct these values, that are obtained from small laboratory-sized specimens, to be able to use them in numerical codes that predict fracture growth in large rock volumes in subsurface. The second contribution is related to the rock anisotropy and its influence on the fracture growth path. We present experimental results on the anisotropy of fracture toughness, and show how important it is to take into account the directional-dependence of fracture toughness when modelling fracture growth in anisotropic formations. Lastly, the third contribution is to distinguish between tension-based and shear-based fracture growth mechanisms. Most numerical models in literature use the maximum tangential stress criterion to predict fracture growth path. We show that this criterion is not able to predict shear-based fracturing that often occurs in the subsurface. We conclude that a reliable numerical code needs to implement a fracturing law that is able to predict both tensile- and shear-based fracturing types.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 76-86
Author(s):  
V. S. Gupalo ◽  
◽  
K. S. Kazakov ◽  
V. A. Minaev ◽  
D. A. Ozerskiy ◽  
...  

The conditions in the crystalline geological massif, which determine the long-term safety of radioactive waste disposal, are reduced to two fundamental factors - the features of the host rocks and the fracture network inherent in the studied area of the massif [3]. Refinement of the parameters identified at the early stages of geological study of cracks is one of the highest priority tasks in the safety assessments of the radioactive waste disposal. These parameters should also be taken into account in the formation of requirements for the composition and structure of the system of engineering barriers preventing the release of radionuclides outside the disposal. The presented material contains a description of the work and the approaches applied in processing the results of borehole surveys of the prospecting and appraisal stages of geological exploration of the Yeniseisky area, performed using the specialized probe with video logging equipment.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenxiang Leng ◽  
Ming Hu ◽  
Yingchun Wang

Abstract Hot dry rock resources as one of the most promising clean energy in the future, with large reserves, renewable and other advantages, since the 1970 s, many countries all over the world have explored and practiced a lot on the exploration and development of hot dry rock resources, however, few studied the heterogeneity of the rock and the underground geologic structures of hot dry rock resources influence domain enrichment regularity of heat transfer mechanism. Therefore, this article considered the thermal conductivity of rock anisotropy, and set up a horizontal stratum and a fold strata 2D geological model, through numerical simulation with the field rock samples indoor triaxial rock thermal conductivity test results, introducing the thermal conductivity of rock anisotropy index A = K vertical bedding/ K parallel bedding and analyze the underground geologic structures’ influence on heat transfer in the rock. The results show that the anisotropy of rock thermal conductivity has no influence on the heat transfer process in underground rock strata when the rock layer is horizontal, which can be regarded as one-dimensional multilayer wall heat transfer. Fold structure will influence the underground heat transfer direction, so it is not simply seen as a one-dimensional multilayer flat wall heat transfer process in numerical simulation. At the inclined interface of rock strata, "heat flow refraction" usually occurs, which further affects the direction of heat transfer. As a result, heat is concentrated in the syncline of the fold structure in the deep and anticline in the middle and deep layers, while the temperature distribution in the shallow layer is almost unaffected by the structure. The research results of this paper are of great significance to the delineation of the target area and the development and utilization of the hot dry rock resources.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Honglei Liu ◽  
Wenhao Shi ◽  
Tianhong Yang

Stratified rock mass is a common rock mass structure and distributed widely on the earth’s crust. High-density distribution of stratified structural planes in the stratified rock mass has a great influence on the mechanics properties of the rock mass, such as anisotropy of stress and seepage. Therefore, anisotropy is the inherent characteristic that must be considered in the stratified rock mass as well as the stratified rock slope stability. According to the anisotropic characteristics of stratified rock mass, an anisotropic seepage-stress coupled model for the mechanical behavior of stratified rock slope is proposed based on the anisotropy elasticity theory. The model is validated by simulating seepage and stress fields of an idealized slope using the finite element method. The deformation and stress-dependent permeability of the slope are predicted and compared well with the previous study, thus confirming its capability in characterizing the response of rock slope that is dominantly affected by rock anisotropy. Finally, the model is used to simulate the anisotropic properties of a stratified rock slope of Fushun west open-pit mine, China. The simulation is in good agreement with the actual measurement, which means the proposed model is capable of simulating anisotropic properties of the stratified rock slope.


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