Author/Authors :
Xiaohui Xiao، نويسنده , , Brian Evans ، نويسنده , , Yves Bernabe ، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Permeability, storage capacity and volumetric strain were measured in situ during
deformation of hot-pressed calcite aggregates containing 10, 20, and 30 wt% quartz. Both isostatic and
conventional triaxial loading conditions were used. The tests were performed at confining pressure of
300 MPa, pore pressures between 50 to 290 MPa, temperatures from 673 to 873 K and strain rates of
3 · 10)5 s)1. Argon gas was used as the pore fluid. The initial porosities of the starting samples varied
from 5% to 9%, with higher porosity correlated to higher quartz content. Microstructural observations
after the experiment indicate two kinds of pores are present: 1) Angular, crack-like pores along boundaries
between quartz grains or between quartz and calcite grains and 2) equant and tubular voids within the
calcite matrix. Under isostatic loading conditions, the compaction rate covaries with porosity and increases
with increasing effective pressure. Most of the permeability reduction induced during compaction is
irreversible and probably owes to plastic processes. As has been found in previous studies on hot-pressed
calcite aggregates, permeability, k, is nonlinearly related to porosity, /. Over small changes in porosity, the
two parameters are approximately related as k / /n. The exponent n strongly increases as porosity
decreases to a finite value (from about 4 to 6% depending on quartz content), suggesting a porosity
percolation threshold. When subjected to triaxial deformation, the calcite-quartz aggregates exhibit shearenhanced
compaction, but permeability does not decrease as rapidly as it does under isostatic conditions.
During triaxial compaction the exponent n only varies between 2 and 3. Non-isostatic deformation seems
to reduce the percolation threshold, and, in fact, enhances the permeability relative to that at the same
porosity during isostatic compaction. Our data provide constraints on the governing parameters of the
compaction theory which describes fluid flow through a viscous matrix, and may have important
implications for expulsion of sedimentary fluids, for fluid flow during deformation and metamorphism, and
melt extraction from partially molten rocks.
Keywords :
Permeability , Porosity , viscous creep , compaction.