Journal of Rock Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering (Jun 2015)

Fracture propagation in sandstone and slate – Laboratory experiments, acoustic emissions and fracture mechanics

  • Ferdinand Stoeckhert,
  • Michael Molenda,
  • Sebastian Brenne,
  • Michael Alber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrmge.2015.03.011
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
pp. 237 – 249

Abstract

Read online

Fracturing of highly anisotropic rocks is a problem often encountered in the stimulation of unconventional hydrocarbon or geothermal reservoirs by hydraulic fracturing. Fracture propagation in isotropic material is well understood but strictly isotropic rocks are rarely found in nature. This study aims at the examination of fracture initiation and propagation processes in a highly anisotropic rock, specifically slate. We performed a series of tensile fracturing laboratory experiments under uniaxial as well as triaxial loading. Cubic specimens with edge lengths of 150 mm and a central borehole with a diameter of 13 mm were prepared from Fredeburg slate. An experiment using the rather isotropic Bebertal sandstone as a rather isotropic rock was also performed for comparison. Tensile fractures were generated using the sleeve fracturing technique, in which a polymer tube placed inside the borehole is pressurized to generate tensile fractures emanating from the borehole. In the uniaxial test series, the loading was varied in order to observe the transition from strength-dominated fracture propagation at low loading magnitudes to stress-dominated fracture propagation at high loading magnitudes.

Keywords