Rapid technique for counting cracks in granitic rocks
Author(s) -
W. B. Durham,
J.M. Beiriger,
H.C. Weed
Publication year - 1984
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/59307
Subject(s) - quartz monzonite , borehole , geology , scanning electron microscope , mineralogy , materials science , geotechnical engineering , pluton , composite material , seismology , tectonics
Using a scanning electron microscope and an image analyzer, we have developed a technique for counting and measuring cracks in rocks which is more efficient than traditional techniques in which an operator performs all image analysis functions. The key aspect of the technique is that black-on-white tracings of fresh cracks, which can be made rather quickly by an operator, are fed to an image analyzer which then digitizes and tabulates data. The most time-consuming step in the process has now become the generation of SEM micrographs and pertinent chemical (mineralogical) information, not the quantification of crack structure. The technique has been applied to two studies involving nuclear waste isolation in a granitic rock, Climax Stock (Nevada Test Site) quartz monzonite, a rock which is structurally very inhomogeneous. One study detected a relationship between crack structure and distance from a hammer-drilled borehole; the other study was unable to detect a relationship between crack structure and gamma irradiation treatment in rocks loaded to near failure. 12 references, 6 figures, 3 tables
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