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Publication Abstract
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Title
Ultrasonic velocity survey in Callovo-Oxfordian argillaceous rock during shaft excavation
Authors
Balland C., Morel J., Armand G. and Pettit W.
Publication Reference
Balland C., Morel J., Armand G. and Pettit W. Ultrasonic velocity survey in Callovo-Oxfordian argillaceous rock during shaft excavation. Int. J. Rock Mech. Min. Sci., Vol 46(1, 69-79), (2009).
Abstract
The excavation of a deep underground structure induces a stress field redistribution that could create an excavation-damaged zone (EDZ). The study of the EDZ is important in the framework of nuclear waste storage, where such EDZ could constitute a preferential pathway of stored material towards the biosphere. Analysis of ultrasonic wave propagation across the rock media around the excavation is one technique that can be used to characterize such zones. This method has been applied in the Meuse/Haute–Marne Underground Research Laboratory (URL) in France to characterize the initialization and evolution of damage around the URL access shaft. To achieve this, a device comprising 21 ultrasonic sensors was spread out at different distances from the shaft wall, at depths between -465 and -475 m. A transversely isotropic model enabled the measured experimental velocities on each ray path during shaft excavation to be integrated. The results highlighted the initialization and extension of the damage as the shaft front proceeded. They also showed a polarization of the velocity field and an oscillation of the transversal isotropy with a preferential orientation of the stress release and the microcracking. Monitoring of the velocity field also highlighted some significantly different behaviour linked to the complex mechanical behaviour of the argillaceous rock.
Key Figure
Link
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/13651609
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