TIME CORRELATION OF CRACK FORMATION DURING IMPACT FRACTURING OF ROCKS
a:2:{s:4:"TEXT";s:44:"I.P. Shcherbakov, V.S. Kuksenko, A.E. Chmel’";s:4:"TYPE";s:4:"text";}
Keywords: Granite, dynamic fracturing, acoustic emission, fractoluminescence, waiting time
Pages: 231-236 Subsection: GEOPHYSICS
Abstract
Samples of marble and granite with different grain sizes were subjected to impact fracturing under laboratory conditions. The acoustic-emission (AE) signals generated by growing cracks were recorded at 10 ns intervals. Synchronically, the fractoluminescence (FL) resulting from the breakage of interatomic bonds on the sample surface was recorded. The duration of the intervals between the AE signals was shown to be a power-low function typical of correlated (self-similar) processes. However, the FL signals did not follow this law, because the duration of free-radical formation is much shorter than the intervals at which they appear when chemical bonds break down. The AE data indicate that new cracks appear more often in materials with a smaller grain size.
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