The transition from brittle faulting to cataclastic flow: Permeability evolution
- 10 February 1997
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research
- Vol. 102 (B2) , 3027-3041
- https://doi.org/10.1029/96jb03282
Abstract
Triaxial compression experiments were conducted to investigate influences of stress and failure mode on axial permeability of five sandstones with porosities ranging from 15% to 35%. In the cataclastic flow regime, permeability and porosity changes closely track one another. A drastic decrease in permeability was triggered by the onset of shear‐enhanced compaction caused by grain crushing and pore collapse. The compactive yield stress C* maps out a boundary in stress space separating two different types of permeability evolution. Before C* is attained, permeability and porosity both decrease with increasing effective mean stress, but they are independent of deviatoric stresses. However, with loading beyond C*, both permeability and porosity changes are strongly dependent on the deviatoric and effective mean stresses. In the brittle faulting regime, permeability and porosity changes are more complex. Before the onset of shear‐induced dilation C', both permeability and porosity decrease with increasing effective mean stress. Beyond C', permeability may actually decrease in a dilating rock prior to brittle failure. After the peak stress has been attained, the development of a relatively impermeable shear band causes an accelerated decrease of permeability. Permeability evolution in porous sandstones is compared with that in low‐porosity crystalline rocks. A conceptual model for the coupling of deformation and fluid transport is proposed in the form of a deformation‐permeability map.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Micromechanics of stress-induced permeability anisotropy and damage in sedimentary rockMechanics of Materials, 1994
- Laboratory measurement of compaction-induced permeability change in porous rocks: Implications for the generation and maintenance of pore pressure excess in the crustPure and Applied Geophysics, 1994
- Effect of Faulting on Fluid Flow in Porous Sandstones: Petrophysical PropertiesAAPG Bulletin, 1994
- Heterogeneous hydrofracture development and accretionary fault dynamicsGeology, 1994
- A wide range permeameter for use in rock physicsInternational Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences, 1987
- Permeability of crystalline and argillaceous rocksInternational Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences, 1980
- Volume changes during fracture and frictional sliding: A reviewPure and Applied Geophysics, 1978
- A note on permeability changes in geologic material due to stressPure and Applied Geophysics, 1978
- Permeability of granite under high pressureJournal of Geophysical Research, 1968
- On the Maintenance of Anomalous Fluid Pressures: I. Thick Sedimentary SequencesGSA Bulletin, 1968