Random Neighborhood Graphs as Models of Fracture Networks on Rocks: Structural and Dynamical Analysis
Ernesto Estrada, Matthew Sheerin

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new random rectangular neighborhood graph model to accurately represent rock fracture networks, capturing their structural features and predicting diffusion processes within them.
Contribution
The study presents a novel RRNG model that fits real RFNs, analyzes their structural properties, and links these to diffusion dynamics, extending understanding of fracture network behavior.
Findings
RRNGs accurately model RFN structures
Structural parameters predict diffusion times
Bounds established for graph diameter and connectivity
Abstract
We propose a new model to account for the main structural characteristics of rock fracture networks (RFNs). The model is based on a generalization of the random neighborhood graphs to consider fractures embedded into rectangular spaces. We study a series of 29 real-world RFNs and find the best fit with the random rectangular neighborhood graphs (RRNGs) proposed here. We show that this model captures most of the structural characteristics of the RFNs and allows a distinction between small and more spherical rocks and large and more elongated ones. We use a diffusion equation on the graphs in order to model diffusive processes taking place through the channels of the RFNs. We find a small set of structural parameters that highly correlates with the average diffusion time in the RFNs. We found analytically some bounds for the diameter and the algebraic connectivity of these graphs that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComplex Network Analysis Techniques · Topological and Geometric Data Analysis · Rock Mechanics and Modeling
