Plane shock wave studies of geologic media
Abstract
Plane shock wave experiments were conducted on eight geologic materials in an effort to determine the importance of time-dependent mechanical behavior. Of the eight rocks studied, only Westerly granite and nugget sandstone appear to show time independence. In the slightly porous materials (1-5 percent) Blair dolomite and sodium chloride, and in the highly porous (15 to 40 percent) rock, Mt. Helen tuff and Indiana limestone, time-dependent behavior is associated with the time required to close the available porosity. In water-saturated rocks the time dependence arises because the water that is present shows no indication of transformation to the higher pressure ice phases, thus suggesting the possibility that a metastable form of water exists under dynamic conditions.
- Publication:
-
Unknown
- Pub Date:
- October 1977
- Bibcode:
- 1977psws.rept.....A
- Keywords:
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- Geology;
- Plane Waves;
- Shock Waves;
- Mechanical Properties;
- Rocks;
- Time Dependence;
- Geophysics