Advanced acoustic emission analysis of brittle and porous rock fracturing

Analysis of Acoustic Emission (AE) induced during brittle and porous rock fracturing at variety of loading conditions has been performed. On the base of advanced analysis of AE parameters, ultrasonic velocities and mechanical data we found that regardless of applied loading conditions the process...

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Main Authors: Stanchits S., Dresen G.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2010-06-01
Series:EPJ Web of Conferences
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20100622010
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spelling doaj-a110bcf5d3954e18adf0f212b4688cab2021-08-02T07:45:24ZengEDP SciencesEPJ Web of Conferences2100-014X2010-06-0162201010.1051/epjconf/20100622010Advanced acoustic emission analysis of brittle and porous rock fracturingStanchits S.Dresen G.Analysis of Acoustic Emission (AE) induced during brittle and porous rock fracturing at variety of loading conditions has been performed. On the base of advanced analysis of AE parameters, ultrasonic velocities and mechanical data we found that regardless of applied loading conditions the process of rock fracture can be separated into two main stages: (A) accumulation of non-correlated cracks localized almost randomly in the whole volume of uniformly stressed rock. (B) Final stage of sample fracturing could be characterized by appearance of AE nucleation site followed by initiation and propagation of the macroscopic fault. Contribution of tensile sources is reduced significantly, shear type and pore collapse type events dominate during propagation of a fracture process zone through the sample regardless of applied loading conditions. In the case of porous rock, nucleation of compaction bands could be clearly identified by the appearance of AE clusters inside the samples. Microstructural analysis of fractured samples shows excellent agreement between location of AE hypocenters and faults or the positions of compaction bands, confirming that advanced AE analysis is a powerful tool for the process of rock fracture investigation. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20100622010
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stanchits S.
Dresen G.
spellingShingle Stanchits S.
Dresen G.
Advanced acoustic emission analysis of brittle and porous rock fracturing
EPJ Web of Conferences
author_facet Stanchits S.
Dresen G.
author_sort Stanchits S.
title Advanced acoustic emission analysis of brittle and porous rock fracturing
title_short Advanced acoustic emission analysis of brittle and porous rock fracturing
title_full Advanced acoustic emission analysis of brittle and porous rock fracturing
title_fullStr Advanced acoustic emission analysis of brittle and porous rock fracturing
title_full_unstemmed Advanced acoustic emission analysis of brittle and porous rock fracturing
title_sort advanced acoustic emission analysis of brittle and porous rock fracturing
publisher EDP Sciences
series EPJ Web of Conferences
issn 2100-014X
publishDate 2010-06-01
description Analysis of Acoustic Emission (AE) induced during brittle and porous rock fracturing at variety of loading conditions has been performed. On the base of advanced analysis of AE parameters, ultrasonic velocities and mechanical data we found that regardless of applied loading conditions the process of rock fracture can be separated into two main stages: (A) accumulation of non-correlated cracks localized almost randomly in the whole volume of uniformly stressed rock. (B) Final stage of sample fracturing could be characterized by appearance of AE nucleation site followed by initiation and propagation of the macroscopic fault. Contribution of tensile sources is reduced significantly, shear type and pore collapse type events dominate during propagation of a fracture process zone through the sample regardless of applied loading conditions. In the case of porous rock, nucleation of compaction bands could be clearly identified by the appearance of AE clusters inside the samples. Microstructural analysis of fractured samples shows excellent agreement between location of AE hypocenters and faults or the positions of compaction bands, confirming that advanced AE analysis is a powerful tool for the process of rock fracture investigation.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20100622010
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