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The role of acoustic emission in the study of rock

David A. Lockner
- Vol. 30, Iss: 7
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TLDR
A review of the successes and limitations of acoustic emission (AE) studies as applied to the fracture process in rock with emphasis on our ability to predict rock failure is presented in this paper, where application of laboratory AE studies to larger scale problems related to the understanding of earthquake processes is also discussed.
Abstract
The development of faults and shear fracture systems over a broad range of temperature and pressure and for a variety of rock types involves the growth and interaction of microcracks. Acoustic emission (AE), which is produced by rapid microcrack growth, is a ubiquitous phenomenon associated with brittle fracture and has provided a wealth of information regarding the failure process in rock. This paper reviews the successes and limitations of AE studies as applied to the fracture process in rock with emphasis on our ability to predict rock failure. Application of laboratory AE studies to larger scale problems related to the understanding of earthquake processes is also discussed. In this context, laboratory studies can be divided into the following categories. 1) Simple counting of the number of AE events prior to sample failure shows a correlation between AE rate and inelastic strain rate. Additional sorting of events by amplitude has shown that AE events obey the power law frequency-magnitude relation observed for earthquakes. These cumulative event count techniques are being used in conjunction with damage mechanics models to determine how damage accumulates during loading and to predict failure. 2) A second area of research involves the location of hypocenters of AE source events. This technique requires precise arrival time data of AE signals recorded over an array of sensors that are essentially a miniature seismic net. Analysis of the spatial and temporal variation of event hypocenters has improved our understanding of the progression of microcrack growth and clustering leading to rock failure. Recently, fracture nucleation and growth have been studied under conditions of quasi-static fault propagation by controlling stress to maintain constant AE rate. 3) A third area of study involves the analysis of full waveform data as recorded at receiver sites. One aspect of this research has been to determine fault plane solutions of AE source events from first motion data. These studies show that in addition to pure tensile and double couple events, a significant number of more complex event types occur in the period leading to fault nucleation. 4) P and S wave velocities (including spatial variations) and attenuation have been obtained by artificially generating acoustic pulses which are modified during passage through the sample. (A) This paper was presented at the 34th U.S. Symposium on rock mechanics, 27-30 June 1993, University of Wisconsin-Madison. For the covering abstract see IRRD 863389.

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Citations
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AE Regularity of Coal Failure Shear Deformation Localization under Triaxial Dynamical Loading

TL;DR: In this paper, a servo-controlled rock mechanics and acoustic emission (AE) integrated test system, the strength, shear deformation localization and damage AE-energy-rate characteristics process of coal specimen from Weihuliang Coal Mine under tri-axial loading were analyzed.
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Study of the Precursory Rules of a Deformation Localization of Coal Specimens

TL;DR: In this article, the appearance of the deformation localization band could be divided into three time periods for the samples which all had splitting failure, and during period II, the relative tension component increased rapidly.
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Study on the physical meaning of seismic inhomogeneous degree by rock fracture experiments

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors focused on the mechanism for the abnormal changes of the seismic inhomogeneous degree (GL value) calculated from the earthquake catalog shows obvious abnormal changes prior to strong earthquakes, indicating the state change of local seismic activity.
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Study on the AE Characteristics and Wave Velocity of Concrete during the Total Failure Process

TL;DR: In this article, an example on AE monitoring and ultrasonic wave velocity measurement of concrete (C20) is carried out on the pressing machine, where AE signals were recorded during loading (fracture propagation) subject to uniaxial compressive loading until failure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental Study on Crack Propagation by AE Location under Uniaxial Compression Condition

TL;DR: In this article, an AE system was employed to investigate the crack propagation and failure modes of three groups of granite specimens (80mm×100mm×170mm) with the same pre-existing crack.
References
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Book

Fracture of Brittle Solids

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a unified continuum, microstructural and atomistic treatment of modern day fracture mechanics from a materials perspective, focusing on the basic elements of bonding and microstructure that govern the intrinsic toughness of ceramics.
Journal ArticleDOI

The frequency-magnitude relation of microfracturing in rock and its relation to earthquakes

TL;DR: In this paper, the frequency-magnitude relation of microfracture deformation was studied and the dependence of the parameter b on rock type, stress, and confining pressure was found to depend primarily on stress.
Journal ArticleDOI

A constitutive law for rate of earthquake production and its application to earthquake clustering

TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a state-variable constitutive formulation for the rate of earthquake production resulting from an applied stressing history, which was implemented using solutions for nucleation of unstable fault slip on faults with experimentally derived rate and state dependent fault properties.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quasi-static fault growth and shear fracture energy in granite

TL;DR: In this article, the failure process in a brittle granite sample can be stabilized by controlling axial stress to maintain a constant rate of acoustic emission, and the post-failure stress curve can be followed quasi-statically, extending to hours the fault growth process.
Journal ArticleDOI

Generalized dimensions of strange attractors

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that there is an infinity of generalized dimensions for strange attractors, related to the order-q Renyi entropies, and that these dimensions are monotonically decreasing with q.
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