[Geotechnical Engineering]
Kainan Xie, Xiang Jiang, Deyi Jiang, Yang Xiao, Shiwan Chen, Karin A. Dahmen, Eduard Vives, Antoni Planes, and Ekhard K.H. Salje. Change of crackling noise in granite by thermal damage: Monitoring nuclear waste deposits [J]. AMERICAN MINERALOGIST,2019,104(01):1578-1584.
Keywords: Crackling noise; granite; thermal damage; acoustic emission
High Lights:
High-sensitivity detection of acoustic emission from granite under uniaxial stress, together with advanced statistical analysis.
High temperature treatment leads to scale invariant crackling noise with a mixed fix-point behavior.
This analysis can serve as a blueprint for a protocol for continuous monitoring of the burial site.
Abstract:
High-sensitivity detection of acoustic emission from granite under uniaxial stress, together with advanced statistical analysis, shows changing collapse mechanisms when a sample is pre-heated. Massive microstructural changes occur at temperatures >500 degrees C while low-temperature (<<500 degrees C) treatment leads to scale invariant crackling noise with a mixed fix-point behavior. After treatment at higher temperatures, the collapse occurs via acoustic signals that show energy distributions with systematic deviations from the Gutenberg-Richter law while the Omori's and Bath's laws are not influenced by the thermal treatment. The granite samples stem from the site in the Beishan mountains where a new burial site for nuclear waste will be constructed. According to the 13th Five-Year Plan of the P.R. China, Chinese nuclear power installed capacity will reach 58 million kilowatts in 2020 and produce about 3200 tons of high-level nuclear waste every year. Monitoring the stability of the host rock at high temperatures becomes hence a key issue. Our analysis can serve as a blueprint for a protocol for continuous monitoring of the burial site.
Resource:
http://www.minsocam.org/MSA/AmMin/TOC/2019/index.html?issue_number=11