Energy dissipation of seismic P- and S-waves in fluid-saturated rocks: An overview focusing on hydraulically connected fractures
Journal article, 2015

An important characteristic of fractured rocks is their high seismic attenuation, which so far has been mainly attributed to wave-induced fluid flow (WIFF) between the fractures and the embedding matrix. The influence of fracture connectivity on seismic attenuation has, however, recently, only been investigated. Numerical compressibility and shear tests based on Biot’s quasi-static poro-elastic equations illustrate that an important manifestation of WIFF arises in the presence of fracture connectivity. The corresponding energy loss, which can be significant for both P- and S-waves, is mainly due to fluid flow within the connected fractures and is sensitive to the permeabilities as well as the lengths and intersection angles of the fractures. Correspondingly, this phenomenon contains valuable information on the governing hydraulic properties of fractured rocks and hence should be accounted for whenever realistic seismic models of such media are needed.

fractured rocks

WIFF

embedding matrix

seismic attenuation

fracture connectivity

Biot’s theory

Author

J. German Rubino

University of Lausanne

Beatriz Quintal

University of Lausanne

Tobias M. Müller

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)

Luis Guarracino

CEILAP-UNIDEF (MINDEF-CONICET)

Ralf Jänicke

University of Applied Sciences Bochum

Holger Steeb

University of Applied Sciences Bochum

Klaus Holliger

University of Lausanne

Journal of Earth Science

1674-487X (ISSN) 1867-111X (eISSN)

Vol. 26 785-790

Subject Categories

Applied Mechanics

Civil Engineering

DOI

10.1007/s12583-015-0613-0

More information

Latest update

10/19/2021