4.6 Article

Acoustic emission feature events during rock failure and their cumulative probability distribution: Case study of phosphate rock and granite

Journal

FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fenvs.2022.1002474

Keywords

rock stability; probability theory; acoustic emission frequency; acoustic emission events; uniaxial loading

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52174085, 51474159]
  2. Project of Youth Innovation Promotion Association of Chinese Academy of Sciences [2021326]
  3. Open Fund of National Engineering and Technology Research Center for Development and Utilization of Phosphate Resources [NECP 2022-08]
  4. Central Leading Local Science and Technology Development Project of Hubei Province [2017ZYYD007]
  5. Graduate Innovative Fund of Wuhan Institute of Technology [CX2021485]

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Rock mass failure is becoming more common in geotechnical engineering projects. This paper analyzes the probability density distributions of initial and peak frequency events in the acoustic emission (AE) data from two types of rock undergoing failure. The study finds that events with an initial frequency of 1,000 kHz and peak frequency of 625 kHz have higher probabilities. The cumulative probability distributions (CPDs) of the characteristic events in the AE data are also investigated, revealing their evolutionary behavior as the rocks fail.
Rock mass failure is gradually becoming more common as the number of geotechnical engineering projects continues to increase. In this paper, the probability density distributions of initial and peak frequency events in the acoustic emission (AE) from two types of rock (phosphate rock and granite) undergoing failure are analyzed. Feature events (FEs) in this AE are proposed and obtained. The probabilities of events with an initial frequency of 1,000 kHz and peak frequency of 625 kHz are found to be higher than those with other frequencies. The evolutionary behavior of the cumulative probability distributions (CPDs) of the FEs as the rocks fail is subsequently investigated. The characteristic FEs of the AE and their CPD evolution behavior in the two rocks are then compared and contrasted. The CPD curves derived for both types of rock consist of four stages: slow rise-concave rise-rapid rise-slow rise. The differences related to the FEs for the two rocks are also found. The duration of the last stage (near rock failure) is quite different for phosphate rock and granite. The peak frequencies of the FEs are the highest and the smallest in the two rocks, respectively. Our method of analyzing the AE data and results provide a theoretical method for analyzing the stability of rock masses and predicting their failure.

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