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Journal ArticleDOI

Elastic wave propagation in media with parallel fractures and aligned cracks

Michael Schoenberg, +1 more
- 01 Aug 1988 - 
- Vol. 36, Iss: 6, pp 571-590
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TLDR
In this article, a model of parallel slip interfaces simulates the behavior of a fracture system composed of large, closely spaced, aligned joints, and the model admits any fracture system anisotropy: triclinic (the most general), monoclinic, orthorhombic or transversely isotropic.
Abstract
A model of parallel slip interfaces simulates the behaviour of a fracture system composed of large, closely spaced, aligned joints. The model admits any fracture system anisotropy: triclinic (the most general), monoclinic, orthorhombic or transversely isotropic, and this is specified by the form of the 3 × 3 fracture system compliance matrix. The fracture system may be embedded in an anisotropic elastic background with no restrictions on the type of anisotropy. To compute the long wavelength equivalent moduli of the fractured medium requires at most the inversion of two 3 × 3 matrices. When the fractures are assumed on average to have rotational symmetry (transversely isotropic fracture system behaviour) and the background is assumed isotropic, the resulting equivalent medium is transversely isotropic and the effect of the additional compliance of the fracture system may be specified by two parameters (in addition to the two isotropic parameters of the isotropic background). Dilute systems of flat aligned microcracks in an isotropic background yield an equivalent medium of the same form as that of the isotropic medium with large joints, i.e. there are two additional parameters due to the presence of the microcracks which play roles in the stress-strain relations of the equivalent medium identical to those played by the parameters due to the presence of large joints. Thus, knowledge of the total of four parameters describing the anisotropy of such a fractured medium tells nothing of the size or concentration of the aligned fractures but does contain information as to the overall excess compliance due to the fracture system and its orientation. As the aligned microcracks, which were assumed to be ellipsoidal, with very small aspect ratio are allowed to become non-fiat, i.e. have a growing aspect ratio, the moduli of the equivalent medium begin to diverge from the standard form of the moduli for flat cracks. The divergence is faster for higher crack densities but only becomes significant for microcracks of aspect ratios approaching 0.3.

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Citations
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Book

The Rock Physics Handbook: Tools for Seismic Analysis of Porous Media

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present basic tools for elasticity and Hooke's law, effective media, granular media, flow and diffusion, and fluid effects on wave propagation for wave propagation.
MonographDOI

The Rock Physics Handbook

TL;DR: The third edition of the reference book as discussed by the authors has been thoroughly updated while retaining its comprehensive coverage of the fundamental theory, concepts, and laboratory results, and highlights applications in unconventional reservoirs, including water, hydrocarbons, gases, minerals, rocks, ice, magma and methane hydrates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seismic anisotropy of fractured rock

Michael Schoenberg, +1 more
- 01 Feb 1995 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, a simple method for including the effects of geologically realistic fractures on the seismic propagation through fractured rocks can be obtained by writing the effective compliance tensor of the fractured rock as the sum of the compliance tensors of the unfractured background rock and the compliant tensors for each set of parallel fractures or aligned fractures.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimation of fracture parameters from reflection seismic data—Part I: HTI model due to a single fracture set

TL;DR: In this article, the authors use the linear slip theory of Schoenberg and co-workers and the models developed by Hudson and Thomsen for pennyshaped cracks to relate the anisotropic parameters to the physical properties of the fracture network and to devise fracture characterization procedures based on surface seismic measurements.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimation of fracture parameters from reflection seismic data—Part III: Fractured models with monoclinic symmetry

TL;DR: In this paper, the linear slip theory was used to obtain simple analytic expressions for the anisotropic coefficients of effective orthorhombic media with a horizontal symmetry plane for naturally fractured reservoirs, under the assumptions of weak anisotropy of the background medium and small compliances of the fractures.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Weak elastic anisotropy

Leon Thomsen
- 01 Oct 1986 - 
TL;DR: The equations governing weak anisotropy are much simpler than those governing strong anisotropic, and they are much easier to grasp intuitively as discussed by the authors, which is why they are easier to understand intuitively.
Journal ArticleDOI

Long-Wave Elastic Anisotropy Produced by Horizontal Layering

TL;DR: In this article, a horizontally layered inhomogeneous medium is considered, whose properties are constant or nearly so when averaged over some vertical height l′, and conditions on the five elastic coefficients of a homogeneous transversely isotropic medium are derived which are necessary and sufficient for the medium to be "long-wave equivalent" to a horizontally-layered inhomogenous medium.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wave speeds and attenuation of elastic waves in material containing cracks

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors derived explicit expressions for the overall elastic parameters and the overall wave speeds and attenuation of elastic waves in cracked materials where the mean crack is circular, and the cracks are either aligned or randomly orientated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Elastic wave behavior across linear slip interfaces

TL;DR: In this article, a model for an imperfectly bonded interface between two elastic media is proposed, where displacement discontinuity, or slip, is taken to be linearly related to the stress traction which is continuous across the interface.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effective anisotropic elastic constants for wave propagation through cracked solids

TL;DR: In this article, the authors associate the variation of attenuation with the imaginary parts of complex effective elastic constants, which permit the simulation of wave propagation through two-phase materials by the calculation of wave propagating through homogeneous anisotropic solids.