Abstract

In comparison with standard nonlinear ultrasonic methods such as frequency mixing or resonance based measurements that allow one to extract average, bulk variations of modulus and attenuation versus strain level, dynamic acousto-elasticity (DAE) allows to obtain the elastic behavior over the entire dynamic cycle, detailing the full nonlinear behavior under tension and compression, including hysteresis and memory effects. To improve our understanding of these phenomena, this work aims at comparing static and dynamic acousto-elasticity to evaluate the influence of strain rate. To this purpose, we perform acousto-elasticity on a sample of Berea sandstone and a glass beads pack, oscillating them from 0.001 to 10 Hz. These results are then compared to DAE measurements made in the kHz range. We observe that the average decrease in modulus increases with frequency, meaning that conditioning effects are higher at high strain rate, when relaxation characteristic time is higher than the oscillation period. This result, together with previous quasi-static measurements (Claytor et al., GRL 2009) showing that the hysteretic behavior disappears when the protocol is performed at a very low strain-rate, confirms that a rate dependent nonlinear elastic model has to considered for a more complete description (Gusev et al., PRB 2004).

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