Investigation Of The Frequency Spectra Of Microseismic Activity In Rock Under Tension

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Y. P. Chugh H. Reginald Hardy Robert Stefanko
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
41
File Size:
1389 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1972

Abstract

Many materials including rocks, ice, metals and their alloys, wood, etc., emit transient vibrations in the audible and subaudible range when stressed. In rocks, this phenomenon is referred to as "microseismic activity, " "rock noise, " or " seismo-acoustical activity. " In metals this phenomenon is often termed "acoustic emission." Each individual microseismic disturbance is generally referred to as a "microseismim" or an "elastic shock." The terms "microseismic activity" and "microseismim" will be employed exclusively in this chapter. Microseismic activity has been observed in many rocks loaded experimentally in the laboratory.1 The form of a group of typical microseismims is shown in Fig. 1. Quantitatively, the microseismic activity in rock under stress is most commonly described by the number of microseismims observed per unit time. This is commonly known as the "noise rate." The noise rate in general increases with increasing stress level and rises sharply just prior to failure of the material.2 The origin of microseismims is not well understood, but it appears to be related to processes of deformation and failure which are accompanied by a sudden release of strain energy. In a polycrystalline material, microseismims may originate at the micro-level as a result of dislocations or at the macro-level by twinning, grain boundary movement, or initiation and propagation of fractures through and between the grains. It is assumed that the sudden release of stored elastic strain energy accompanying these processes generates a stress wave which travels from the point of origin, within the material, to a boundary where it is observed as a
Citation

APA: Y. P. Chugh H. Reginald Hardy Robert Stefanko  (1972)  Investigation Of The Frequency Spectra Of Microseismic Activity In Rock Under Tension

MLA: Y. P. Chugh H. Reginald Hardy Robert Stefanko Investigation Of The Frequency Spectra Of Microseismic Activity In Rock Under Tension. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1972.

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