方解石
地质学
微尺度化学
磁导率
岩土工程
导水率
多孔性
薄泥浆
材料科学
矿物学
土壤水分
土壤科学
数学教育
生物
遗传学
膜
数学
作者
Dominique J. Tobler,James M. Minto,Gráinne El Mountassir,Rebecca J. Lunn,Vernon R. Phoenix
摘要
Abstract Microbially induced CaCO 3 precipitation (MICP) has shown great potential to reduce permeability in intact rocks as a means to seal fluid pathways in subsurface ground, for example, to secure waste storage repositories. However, much less is known about how to apply MICP to seal fractured rock. Furthermore, there is limited information on the hydraulic and mechanical properties of MICP filled fractures, which are essential criteria to assess seal performance. Here MICP injection strategies were tested on sandstone cores, aimed at obtaining a homogeneous porosity fill that reduced permeability by 3 orders of magnitude. The injection strategy resulting in the most homogenous calcite distribution was then applied to fractured granite cores, to yield transmissivity reduction of up to 4 orders of magnitude. Microscale analysis of these sealed granite cores using X‐ray‐computed tomography and electron microscopy showed that >67% of the fracture aperture was filled with calcite, with crystals growing from both fracture planes, and bridging the fracture aperture in several places. Shear strength tests performed on these cores showed that the peak shear strength correlated well with the percentage of the fracture area where calcite bridged the aperture. Notably, brittle failure occurred within the MICP grout, showing that the calcite crystals were strongly attached to the granite surface. If MICP fracture‐sealing strategies can be designed such that the majority of CaCO 3 crystals bridge across the fracture aperture, then MICP has the potential to provide significant mechanical stability to the rock mass as well as forming a hydraulic barrier.
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