Micro-Scale Characterization of Quartzitic and Carbonate Sand Grains Using Nanoindentation

Many offshore energy infrastructures are built on carbonate sands which are skeletal remains of marine organisms. Carbonate sands have a porous grain structure and are more compressible compared to quartzitic sand grains which are abundant in alluvial depositional environments. Consequently, there i...

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Main Author: Geyin, Mertcan
Other Authors: Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/81274
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-812742020-09-29T05:40:12Z Micro-Scale Characterization of Quartzitic and Carbonate Sand Grains Using Nanoindentation Geyin, Mertcan Civil and Environmental Engineering Olgun, Celal Guney Filz, George M. Rodriguez-Marek, Adrian Nanoindentation Quartzitic Carbonate Young's Modulus Hardness Stiffness Many offshore energy infrastructures are built on carbonate sands which are skeletal remains of marine organisms. Carbonate sands have a porous grain structure and are more compressible compared to quartzitic sand grains which are abundant in alluvial depositional environments. Consequently, there is a stark difference in material behavior of carbonate sands and it is difficult to characterize this distinct behavior with conventional methods. This study focuses on micro-scale characterization of carbonate and quartzitic sands to overcome this challenge. Experimental studies consist of nanoindentation tests performed on 17 different sands; 7 quartzitic and 10 carbonate sand samples. Mechanical properties of individual sand grains with different mineralogies are determined using nanoindentation. A force is applied by the nanoindenter on the grain surface and the load-displacement curve is developed. Modulus and hardness of individual sand grains are evaluated. Nanoindentation test results show that modulus and hardness of carbonate sands are significantly lower than quartzitic sands. For quartzitic grains, mechanical properties are relatively independent of indentation depth; whereas, for carbonate grains there is a considerable decrease in both Young's modulus and hardness values with increasing indentation depth. Results from this study can further be used for the evaluation of compressibility and strength characteristics of these two types of sands as part of a multi-scale analysis framework. Master of Science 2017-12-20T07:00:19Z 2017-12-20T07:00:19Z 2016-06-27 Thesis vt_gsexam:8096 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/81274 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Nanoindentation
Quartzitic
Carbonate
Young's Modulus
Hardness
Stiffness
spellingShingle Nanoindentation
Quartzitic
Carbonate
Young's Modulus
Hardness
Stiffness
Geyin, Mertcan
Micro-Scale Characterization of Quartzitic and Carbonate Sand Grains Using Nanoindentation
description Many offshore energy infrastructures are built on carbonate sands which are skeletal remains of marine organisms. Carbonate sands have a porous grain structure and are more compressible compared to quartzitic sand grains which are abundant in alluvial depositional environments. Consequently, there is a stark difference in material behavior of carbonate sands and it is difficult to characterize this distinct behavior with conventional methods. This study focuses on micro-scale characterization of carbonate and quartzitic sands to overcome this challenge. Experimental studies consist of nanoindentation tests performed on 17 different sands; 7 quartzitic and 10 carbonate sand samples. Mechanical properties of individual sand grains with different mineralogies are determined using nanoindentation. A force is applied by the nanoindenter on the grain surface and the load-displacement curve is developed. Modulus and hardness of individual sand grains are evaluated. Nanoindentation test results show that modulus and hardness of carbonate sands are significantly lower than quartzitic sands. For quartzitic grains, mechanical properties are relatively independent of indentation depth; whereas, for carbonate grains there is a considerable decrease in both Young's modulus and hardness values with increasing indentation depth. Results from this study can further be used for the evaluation of compressibility and strength characteristics of these two types of sands as part of a multi-scale analysis framework. === Master of Science
author2 Civil and Environmental Engineering
author_facet Civil and Environmental Engineering
Geyin, Mertcan
author Geyin, Mertcan
author_sort Geyin, Mertcan
title Micro-Scale Characterization of Quartzitic and Carbonate Sand Grains Using Nanoindentation
title_short Micro-Scale Characterization of Quartzitic and Carbonate Sand Grains Using Nanoindentation
title_full Micro-Scale Characterization of Quartzitic and Carbonate Sand Grains Using Nanoindentation
title_fullStr Micro-Scale Characterization of Quartzitic and Carbonate Sand Grains Using Nanoindentation
title_full_unstemmed Micro-Scale Characterization of Quartzitic and Carbonate Sand Grains Using Nanoindentation
title_sort micro-scale characterization of quartzitic and carbonate sand grains using nanoindentation
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/81274
work_keys_str_mv AT geyinmertcan microscalecharacterizationofquartziticandcarbonatesandgrainsusingnanoindentation
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