TY - JOUR
T1 - Direct measurement of contact area and stress dependence of anisotropic flow through rock fracture with heterogeneous aperture distribution
AU - Nemoto, Katsumi
AU - Watanabe, Noriaki
AU - Hirano, Nobuo
AU - Tsuchiya, Noriyoshi
N1 - Funding Information:
The current study was partially funded by a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (No. 15360472). We are grateful to Dr. Kazuhiko Tezuka (JAPEX Co., Ltd.) and Dr. Kimio Watanabe (RichStone, Ltd.) for providing the D/SC algorithm for our simulation code.
PY - 2009/4/30
Y1 - 2009/4/30
N2 - Direct measurement of a contact area using pressure-sensitive film was performed for artificially generated granite tensile fractures, with different shear displacements of 2, 3, and 5 mm and at various normal stresses of up to approximately 100 MPa, to clarify the relationship between anisotropic flow and normal stress in a rock fracture with shear displacement. Aperture distributions with contact areas were then numerically generated using fracture surface geometry data, and anisotropic flow was evaluated through a bi-directional flow simulation. The directional distributions of contacting asperities in the fracture plane were clearly observed for every given condition and the contacting asperities tended to align in the direction perpendicular to shear displacement. Generally, the contact area increased and the anisotropic distribution was enhanced with increasing normal stress. However, the contact areas for ≥ 3 mm shear displacement were less stress dependent. Anisotropic flow with higher permeability in the perpendicular direction was always observed for aperture distributions with an anisotropic distribution of the contacting asperities. Flow paths created in the aperture distributions seemed less tortuous in the perpendicular direction due to the distribution of the contacting asperities. The anisotropic flow was enhanced with increasing normal stress to the fracture, and was more evident for the smaller shear displacements of 2 mm due to the high sensitivity of the contact area to the normal stress. The results suggested that the anisotropic flow was likely for a wide range of normal stresses (and correspondingly, at varying depths in the Earth's crust), at which anisotropic flow was enhanced with increasing normal stress based on the stress dependence of the contact area. In addition, the stress dependent anisotropic flow is expected for much higher normal stresses because complete fracture closure with 100% contact area may be unexpected under the crustal stress conditions at depths of several to ten thousand meters.
AB - Direct measurement of a contact area using pressure-sensitive film was performed for artificially generated granite tensile fractures, with different shear displacements of 2, 3, and 5 mm and at various normal stresses of up to approximately 100 MPa, to clarify the relationship between anisotropic flow and normal stress in a rock fracture with shear displacement. Aperture distributions with contact areas were then numerically generated using fracture surface geometry data, and anisotropic flow was evaluated through a bi-directional flow simulation. The directional distributions of contacting asperities in the fracture plane were clearly observed for every given condition and the contacting asperities tended to align in the direction perpendicular to shear displacement. Generally, the contact area increased and the anisotropic distribution was enhanced with increasing normal stress. However, the contact areas for ≥ 3 mm shear displacement were less stress dependent. Anisotropic flow with higher permeability in the perpendicular direction was always observed for aperture distributions with an anisotropic distribution of the contacting asperities. Flow paths created in the aperture distributions seemed less tortuous in the perpendicular direction due to the distribution of the contacting asperities. The anisotropic flow was enhanced with increasing normal stress to the fracture, and was more evident for the smaller shear displacements of 2 mm due to the high sensitivity of the contact area to the normal stress. The results suggested that the anisotropic flow was likely for a wide range of normal stresses (and correspondingly, at varying depths in the Earth's crust), at which anisotropic flow was enhanced with increasing normal stress based on the stress dependence of the contact area. In addition, the stress dependent anisotropic flow is expected for much higher normal stresses because complete fracture closure with 100% contact area may be unexpected under the crustal stress conditions at depths of several to ten thousand meters.
KW - anisotropic fluid flow
KW - contact area
KW - direct measurement
KW - heterogeneous aperture distribution
KW - rock fracture
KW - stress dependence
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U2 - 10.1016/j.epsl.2009.02.005
DO - 10.1016/j.epsl.2009.02.005
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:63149165852
SN - 0012-821X
VL - 281
SP - 81
EP - 87
JO - Earth and Planetary Sciences Letters
JF - Earth and Planetary Sciences Letters
IS - 1-2
ER -