GSTDTAP
项目编号NE/R001693/1
Catastrophic Failure: what controls precursory damage localisation in rocks?
Ian Graham Main
主持机构University of Edinburgh
项目开始年2017
2017-12-01
项目结束日期2021-02-28
资助机构UK-NERC
项目类别Research Grant
项目经费634949(GBP)
国家英国
语种英语
英文摘要Catastrophic failure is a critically-important phenomenon in the brittle Earth on a variety of scales, from human-induced seismicity to natural landslides, volcanic eruptions and earthquakes. It is invariably associated with the structural concentration of damage in the form of smaller faults and fractures on localised zones of deformation, eventually resulting in system-sized brittle failure along a distinct and emergent fault plane. However, the process of localisation is not well understood - smaller cracks spontaneously self-organise along the incipient fault plane, often immediately before failure, but the precise mechanisms involved have yet to be determined. Many questions remain, including : Q1 - How do cracks, pores and grain boundaries interact locally with the applied stress field to cause catastrophic failure to occur at a specific place, orientation and time?; Q2 what dictates the relative importance of quasi-static and dynamic processes?; and Q3 - why can we detect precursors to catastrophic failure only in some cases?

Here we will address these questions directly by imaging the whole localisation process, using a newly-developed x-ray transparent deformation cell and fast synchrotron x-ray micro-tomography. We will visualise the nature and evolution of the localisation process structurally and seismically together for the first time at high resolution in a synchrotron. We will deliberately slow the process to image its evolution, and to investigate the strain-rate dependence of the underlying mechanisms, using rapid electronic monitoring and feedback control. This will provide unprecedented direct observation of the relevant mechanisms, including the contribution of seismic (local cracking producing acoustic emissions) and aseismic (elastic loading and silent irreversible damage) processes to the outcome. This innovative combination of techniques is timely, feasible, and is likely to transform our understanding of the role of microscopic processes in controlling system-size failure. The results will provide interpretive models for similar processes in natural and human-induced seismicity, including scale-model tests of strategies for managing the risk of large induced events.
来源学科分类Natural Environment Research
文献类型项目
条目标识符http://119.78.100.173/C666/handle/2XK7JSWQ/86929
专题环境与发展全球科技态势
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Ian Graham Main.Catastrophic Failure: what controls precursory damage localisation in rocks?.2017.
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