Geomechanical behaviour of Opalinus Clay at multiple scales: results from Mont Terri rock laboratory (Switzerland)

被引:24
|
作者
Amann, Florian [1 ]
Wild, Katrin M. [1 ]
Loew, Simon [1 ]
Yong, Salina [2 ]
Thoeny, Reto [3 ]
Frank, Erik [4 ]
机构
[1] Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Inst Geol, Engn Geol, Sonneggstr 5, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland
[2] Knight Piesold Ltd, Suite 1400 750 West Pender, Vancouver, BC V6C 2T8, Canada
[3] Consult Switzerland AG, Grundwasserschutz & Entsorgung AF, CH-5405 Baden, Switzerland
[4] Eidgenoss Nukl Sicherheitsinspektorat ENSI, Sekt Geol GEOL, Ind Str 19, CH-5200 Brugg, Switzerland
关键词
Clay shale; Excavation damaged zone; Undrained shear strength; Pore-pressure response; Suction; Tectonic structures; Nuclear waste disposal;
D O I
10.1007/s00015-016-0245-0
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The paper represents a summary about our research projects conducted between 2003 and 2015 related to the mechanical behaviour of Opalinus Clay at Mont Terri. The research summarized covers a series of laboratory and field tests that address the brittle failure behaviour of Opalinus Clay, its undrained and effective strength, the dependency of petro-physical and mechanical properties on total suction, hydro-mechanically coupled phenomena and the development of a damage zone around excavations. On the laboratory scale, even simple laboratory tests are difficult to interpret and uncertainties remain regarding the representativeness of the results. We show that suction may develop rapidly after core extraction and substantially modifies the strength, stiffness, and petro-physical properties of Opalinus Clay. Consolidated undrained tests performed on fully saturated specimens revealed a relatively small true cohesion and confirmed the strong hydro-mechanically coupled behaviour of this material. Strong hydro-mechanically coupled processes may explain the stability of cores and tunnel excavations in the short term. Pore-pressure effects may cause effective stress states that favour stability in the short term but may cause longer-term deformations and damage as the pore-pressure dissipates. In-situ observations show that macroscopic fracturing is strongly influenced by bedding planes and faults planes. In tunnel sections where opening or shearing along bedding planes or faults planes is kinematically free, the induced fracture type is strongly dependent on the fault plane frequency and orientation. A transition from extensional macroscopic failure to shearing can be observed with increasing fault plane frequency. In zones around the excavation where bedding plane shearing/shearing along tectonic fault planes is kinematically restrained, primary extensional type fractures develop. In addition, heterogeneities such as single tectonic fault planes or fault zones substantially modify the stress redistribution and thus control zones around the excavation where new fractures may form.
引用
收藏
页码:151 / 171
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Geological and hydraulic characterisation of the excavation disturbed zone in the Opalinus Clay of the Mont Terri Rock Laboratory
    Bossart, P
    Meier, PM
    Moeri, A
    Trick, T
    Mayor, JC
    ENGINEERING GEOLOGY, 2002, 66 (1-2) : 19 - 38
  • [32] The in situ experiment on biogeochemical processes in the Opalinus Clay at the Mont Terri Underground Research Laboratory, Switzerland Foreword
    Petit, Jean-Claude
    APPLIED GEOCHEMISTRY, 2011, 26 (06) : 929 - 930
  • [33] Drilling and excavation techniques in Opalinus Clay at Mont Terri Underground Laboratory
    Techniques de forages et d'excavations dans les argiles à Opalinus, laboratoire souterrain du Mont Terri
    2012, Ver. Schweizerischer Petroleum Geol. und Ing. (17):
  • [34] Microbial community analysis of Opalinus Clay drill core samples from the Mont Terri Underground Research Laboratory, Switzerland
    Stroes-Gascoyne, S.
    Schippers, A.
    Schwyn, B.
    Poulain, S.
    Sergeant, C.
    Simonoff, M.
    Le Marrec, C.
    Altmann, S.
    Nagaoka, T.
    Mauclaire, L.
    McKenzie, J.
    Daumas, S.
    Vinsot, A.
    Beaucaire, C.
    Matray, J. -M.
    GEOMICROBIOLOGY JOURNAL, 2007, 24 (01) : 1 - 17
  • [35] Microstructures and deformation mechanisms in Opalinus Clay: insights from scaly clay from the Main Fault in the Mont Terri Rock Laboratory (CH)
    Laurich, Ben
    Urai, Janos L.
    Nussbaum, Christophe
    SOLID EARTH, 2017, 8 (01) : 27 - 44
  • [36] Porewater chemistry of Opalinus Clay revisited: Findings from 25 years of data collection at the Mont Terri Rock Laboratory
    Wersin, Paul
    Mazurek, Martin
    Gimmi, Thomas
    APPLIED GEOCHEMISTRY, 2022, 138
  • [37] ID reactive transport model for the Opalinus Clay at Mont Terri underground laboratory
    Arcos, D
    Bruno, J
    Peña, J
    Turrero, MJ
    Fernández, AM
    WATER-ROCK INTERACTION, VOLS 1 AND 2, 2001, : 1303 - 1306
  • [38] Detection and cultivation of indigenous microorganisms in Mesozoic claystone core samples from the Opalinus Clay Formation (Mont Terri Rock Laboratory)
    Mauclaire, L.
    McKenzie, J. A.
    Schwyn, B.
    Bossart, P.
    PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY OF THE EARTH, 2007, 32 (1-7) : 232 - 240
  • [39] Deformation mechanisms and evolution of the microstructure of gouge in the Main Fault in Opalinus Clay in the Mont Terri rock laboratory (CH)
    Laurich, Ben
    Urai, Janos L.
    Vollmer, Christian
    Nussbaum, Christophe
    SOLID EARTH, 2018, 9 (01) : 1 - 24
  • [40] GRS' Research on Clay Rock in the Mont Terri Underground Laboratory
    Wieczorek, Klaus
    Czaikowski, Oliver
    ATW-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUCLEAR POWER, 2016, 61 (07): : 480 - 485