Inducing tensile failure of claystone through thermal pressurization in a novel triaxial device
Philipp Braun, Pierre Delage, Siavash Ghabezloo, Baptiste Chabot,, Nathalie Conil, Minh-Ngoc Vu

TL;DR
This study develops a novel triaxial device to induce and analyze tensile failure in claystone under thermo-hydromechanical conditions simulating repository environments, providing insights into fracture criteria and failure mechanisms.
Contribution
A new experimental setup enabling independent control of stress, pore pressure, and temperature to study tensile failure in claystone under realistic conditions.
Findings
Failure occurs at around 3.0 MPa axial effective tensile stress.
Fracturing behavior can be described by Hoek-Brown or Griffith criteria.
Thermo-poroelastic model reproduces observed deformation.
Abstract
Complex coupled thermo-hydromechanical (THM) loading paths are expected to occur in clay rocks which serve as host formations for geological radioactive waste repositories. Exothermic waste packages heat the rock, causing thermal strains and temperature induced pore pressure build-up. The drifts are designed in such a way as to limit these effects. One has to anticipate failure and fracturing of the material, should pore pressures exceed the tensile resistance of the rock. To characterise the behaviour of the Callovo-Oxfordian claystone (COx) under effective tension and to quantify the tensile failure criterion, a laboratory program is carried out in this work. THM loading paths which correspond to the expected in situ conditions are recreated in the laboratory. To this end, a special triaxial system was developed, which allows the independent control of radial and axial stresses, as…
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