A laboratory investigation of thermally induced pore pressures in the Callovo-Oxfordian Claystone
Mehrdokht Mohajerani, Pierre Delage, Jean Sulem, Mohammad Monfared,, Anh-Minh Tang, Behrouz Gatmiri (ANDRA)

TL;DR
This study experimentally investigates how heat-induced pore pressures develop in Callovo-Oxfordian claystone, emphasizing the importance of proper saturation procedures and calibration to accurately measure thermal pressurization effects relevant for radioactive waste disposal.
Contribution
It provides new experimental data on thermal pore pressure behavior in low-permeability claystone, highlighting the temperature dependence of the thermal pressurization coefficient.
Findings
Thermal pressurization coefficient varies with temperature.
Proper saturation is crucial for accurate measurements.
Calibration procedures significantly impact pore pressure data.
Abstract
In the framework of research into radioactive waste disposal, it was decided to investigate the thermally induce pore pressure occurring in the Callovo-Oxfordian claystone, a possible host rock in which the ANDRA underground laboratory of Bure (East of France) has been excavated. Thermal pore pressures appear in low permeability soils and rocks because the thermal expansion coefficient of water is significantly higher than that of the solid grains (Campanella and Mitchell; 1968 [1], Ghabezloo and Sulem; 2009 [2]). This phenomenon has clearly been observed in various in-situ heating tests conducted in Opalinus claystone in the Mont-Terri Underground Research Laboratory (URL) in Switzerland (HE-D test) and in Callovo-Oxfordian (COx) claystone in the Bure URL in France (TER test, Wileveau and Su; 2007 [3]) The processes of coring, transportation, storage and specimen trimming induce some…
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