72 research outputs found
A Pre-Landing Assessment of Regolith Properties at the InSight Landing Site
This article discusses relevant physical properties of the regolith at the Mars InSight landing site as understood prior to landing of the spacecraft. InSight will land in the northern lowland plains of Mars, close to the equator, where the regolith is estimated to be ≥3--5 m thick. These investigations of physical properties have relied on data collected from Mars orbital measurements, previously collected lander and rover data, results of studies of data and samples from Apollo lunar missions, laboratory measurements on regolith simulants, and theoretical studies. The investigations include changes in properties with depth and temperature. Mechanical properties investigated include density, grain-size distribution, cohesion, and angle of internal friction. Thermophysical properties include thermal inertia, surface emissivity and albedo, thermal conductivity and diffusivity, and specific heat. Regolith elastic properties not only include parameters that control seismic wave velocities in the immediate vicinity of the Insight lander but also coupling of the lander and other potential noise sources to the InSight broadband seismometer. The related properties include Poisson’s ratio, P- and S-wave velocities, Young’s modulus, and seismic attenuation. Finally, mass diffusivity was investigated to estimate gas movements in the regolith driven by atmospheric pressure changes. Physical properties presented here are all to some degree speculative. However, they form a basis for interpretation of the early data to be returned from the InSight mission.Additional co-authors: Nick Teanby and Sharon Keda
New Experimental Equipment Recreating Geo-Reservoir Conditions in Large, Fractured, Porous Samples to Investigate Coupled Thermal, Hydraulic and Polyaxial Stress Processes
Abstract Use of the subsurface for energy resources (enhanced geothermal systems, conventional and unconventional hydrocarbons), or for storage of waste (CO2, radioactive), requires the prediction of how fluids and the fractured porous rock mass interact. The GREAT cell (Geo-Reservoir Experimental Analogue Technology) is designed to recreate subsurface conditions in the laboratory to a depth of 3.5 km on 200 mm diameter rock samples containing fracture networks, thereby enabling these predictions to be validated. The cell represents an important new development in experimental technology, uniquely creating a truly polyaxial rotatable stress field, facilitating fluid flow through samples, and employing state of the art fibre optic strain sensing, capable of thousands of detailed measurements per hour. The cell’s mechanical and hydraulic operation is demonstrated by applying multiple continuous orientations of principal stress to a homogeneous benchmark sample, and to a fractured sample with a dipole borehole fluid fracture flow experiment, with backpressure. Sample strain for multiple stress orientations is compared to numerical simulations validating the operation of the cell. Fracture permeability as a function of the direction and magnitude of the stress field is presented. Such experiments were not possible to date using current state of the art geotechnical equipment
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 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
Ultrasonic velocities, acoustic emission characteristics and crack damage of basalt and granite
Acoustic emissions (AE), compressional (P), shear (S) wave velocities, and volumetric strain
of Etna basalt and Aue granite were measured simultaneously during triaxial compression tests.
Deformation-induced AE activity and velocity changes were monitored using twelve P-wave sensors and
eight orthogonally polarized S-wave piezoelectric sensors; volumetric strain was measured using two pairs of
orthogonal strain gages glued directly to the rock surface. P-wave velocity in basalt is about 3 km/s at
atmospheric pressure, but increases by > 50% when the hydrostatic pressure is increased to 120 MPa. In
granite samples initialP-wave velocity is 5 km/s and increases with pressure by<20%. The pressure-induced
changes of elastic wave speed indicate dominantly compliant low-aspect ratio pores in both materials, in
addition Etna basalt also contains high-aspect ratio voids. In triaxial loading, stress-induced anisotropy of Pwave
velocities was significantly higher for basalt than for granite, with vertical velocity components being
faster than horizontal velocities. However, with increasing axial load, horizontal velocities show a small
increase for basalt but a significant decrease for granite. Using first motion polarity we determinedAE source
types generated during triaxial loading of the samples. With increasing differential stressAEactivity in granite
and basalt increased with a significant contribution of tensile events. Close to failure the relative contribution
of tensile events and horizontal wave velocities decreased significantly. A concomitant increase of doublecouple
events indicating shear, suggests shear cracks linking previously formed tensile cracks.Published974-993reserve
Borehole Breakouts in St. Meinrad Sandstone under Hydrostatic to Highly Anisotropic Far-field Stresses
- …
