4.6 Article

AE event rate characteristics of flawed granite: from damage stress to ultimate failure

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL JOURNAL INTERNATIONAL
Volume 222, Issue 2, Pages 795-814

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gji/ggaa207

Keywords

Fracture and flow; Geomechanics; Image processing; Instability analysis; Time-series analysis

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51839009, 51679017]

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Uniaxial compression tests with combined acousto-optical monitoring techniques are conducted on flawed granite specimens, with the aim of investigating the fracture-related acoustic emission (AE) event rate characteristics at the unstable cracking phase in flawed rocks. The interevent time (MT) function F(tau) is adopted to interpret the AE time-series from damage stress (sigma(cd)) to ultimate failure, and photographic data are used to evaluate unstable cracking behaviours in flawed granite. The results show that a high AE event rate is always registered but intermittently interrupted by macrofracturing at the unstable cracking phase. The reversed U-shaped curve relation between the AE event rate and the loading time is documented in unstable flawed granite for the first time. The acoustic quiescence has a mechanismic linkage and quantitative correlation with stress drop, and this synchronous acousto-mechanical behaviour is a typical result of the initiation, growth and coalescence of macrocracks initiated from the flaw tips. Moreover, the reactivation and intensification of fracture process zones (FPZs) by increasing loads are the dominant mechanism triggering unstable crack growth in flawed granite.

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