
Anticrack inclusion model for compaction bands in sandstone
Author(s) -
Sternlof Kurt R.,
Rudnicki John W.,
Pollard David D.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: solid earth
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2005jb003764
Subject(s) - compaction , discontinuity (linguistics) , geology , porosity , anisotropy , deformation bands , compressibility , wedge (geometry) , materials science , mineralogy , geometry , mechanics , geotechnical engineering , composite material , optics , physics , mathematical analysis , microstructure , mathematics
Detailed observations of compaction bands exposed in the Aztec Sandstone of southeastern Nevada indicate that these thin, tabular, bounded features of localized porosity loss initiated at pervasive grain‐scale flaws, which collapsed in response to compressive tectonic loading. From many of these Griffith‐type flaws, an apparently self‐sustaining progression of collapse propagated outward to form bands of compacted grains a few centimeters thick and tens of meters in planar extent. These compaction bands can be idealized as highly eccentric ellipsoidal bodies that have accommodated uniform uniaxial plastic strain parallel to their short dimension within a surrounding elastic material. They thus can be represented mechanically as contractile Eshelby inclusions, which generate near‐tip compressive stress concentrations consistent with self‐sustaining, in‐plane propagation. The combination of extreme aspect ratio (∼10 −4 ) and significant uniaxial plastic strain (∼10%) also justifies an approximation of the bands as anticracks: sharp boundaries across which a continuous distribution of closing mode displacement discontinuity has been accommodated. This anticrack interpretation of compaction bands is analogous to that of pressure solution surfaces, except that porosity loss takes the place of material dissolution. We find that displacement discontinuity boundary element modeling of compaction bands as anticracks within a two‐dimensional linear elastic continuum can accurately represent the perturbed external stress fields they induce.