4.7 Article

Investigating the effect of confining pressure on fracture toughness of CO2-saturated coals

Journal

ENGINEERING FRACTURE MECHANICS
Volume 242, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.engfracmech.2020.107496

Keywords

Supercritical carbon dioxide; Coal; Confining pressure; Fracture toughness; Modified maximum tangential stress criterion

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52004203, 51904202]

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The study reveals that CO2 saturation has a significant impact on the fracture toughness of coal, with an increase in CO2 saturation pressure resulting in a gradual decrease in fracture toughness. On the other hand, increasing confining pressure leads to higher fracture toughness in coal, with linear and quadratic relationships observed for mode I and mode II loading, respectively. Additionally, the fracture toughness decreases more rapidly under supercritical CO2 saturation confining pressure compared to N2 saturation confining pressure, and the modified maximum tangential stress criterion shows better compliance with experimental results than the traditional maximum tangential stress criterion.
The present paper investigates the effects of CO2-saturation and confining pressures on the fracture toughness of bituminous coals. Three-point bending experiments were performed with semi-circular coal specimens (SCB) after they were immersed in different CO2 pressures. The experimental results show that the pure modes I and II fracture toughnesses of coal samples gradually decrease with the growth of CO2-saturation pressure. Additionally, the fracture toughness reduces significantly after the CO2-saturation pressure exceeds 7.38 MPa, the threshold value of its supercritical state. When the CO2-saturation pressure arrives at 10 MPa, the degradation degree of the fracture toughness of the coal reaches the maximum. Furthermore, we tested the fracture toughness of coal SCB specimens under N-2-saturation and CO2-saturation confining pressure conditions, respectively. As the N-2-saturation confining pressure rises, the mode I and II fracture toughnesses increase gradually. The relationship between confining pressure and fracture toughness can be characterized by linear and quadratic functions for the mode I and mode II loading, respectively. The fracture toughness of coals decreases more rapidly under supercritical CO2 (scCO(2))-saturation confining pressure than that under N-2-saturation confining pressure. Furthermore, the theoretical values based on modified maximum tangential stress (MMTS) criterion that takes into account the effects of the T-stress are found to comply better with experimental results than those predicted by traditional maximum tangential stress (MTS) criterion.

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