Abstract
SUMMARY We perform seismic and ultrasonic measurements in carbonate and shaley sandstone samples as a function of differential pressure. The velocities show a strong frequency and pressure dependence. The dispersion disappears with increasing pressure and the squirt flow in turn inhibits the pressure dependence. To model these effects, we combine the Gurevich's squirt-flow model with the Mori–Tanaka scheme and the David Zimmerman model, and extend it with third-order elastic constants, to obtain a frequency-dependent acoustoelasticity model. Comparisons between measurements from this study and literature and modelling results show that the P-wave velocity increases non-linearly first and then nearly linearly, dominated by crack closure and acoustoelasticity, respectively. The pressure dependence of wave velocities is reduced by liquid substitution and further by the squirt-flow mechanism. The effects of fluid properties and crack closure on P-wave velocity decrease with differential pressure. The results will feed a new model and help better understanding the wave propagation in pre-stressed rocks at different scales.
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