2022
DOI: 10.1007/s40948-022-00382-6
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Effects of water content on mechanical failure behaviors of coal samples

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Cited by 14 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…According to the relevant theories of hydrogeology, the forms of water in coal and rock voids usually include bound water, gravity water, and capillary water. Bound water is difficult to release before the temperature significantly increases, while gravity water and capillary water can evaporate at temperatures slightly higher than the evaporation temperature 61 . Assuming that the mass of a specimen after drying is m d and the mass of the specimen saturated with water is m s , the expression ω t for the saturation of the specimen after a certain watercontaining treatment is: where m t is the mass of the specimen after some treatment.…”
Section: Principles Of Water Absorption Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to the relevant theories of hydrogeology, the forms of water in coal and rock voids usually include bound water, gravity water, and capillary water. Bound water is difficult to release before the temperature significantly increases, while gravity water and capillary water can evaporate at temperatures slightly higher than the evaporation temperature 61 . Assuming that the mass of a specimen after drying is m d and the mass of the specimen saturated with water is m s , the expression ω t for the saturation of the specimen after a certain watercontaining treatment is: where m t is the mass of the specimen after some treatment.…”
Section: Principles Of Water Absorption Designmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Unlike conventional natural gas, CBM is primarily stored in coal reservoirs through adsorption [15]. As a special organic rock mass, coal reservoirs are featured with developed pore and cleat system [16,17], low mechanical strength [18,19], strong heterogeneity [20,21], etc. Meanwhile, coal reservoirs are very sensitive to pressure, temperature, and stress, leading to evident planar and vertical variations in CBM accumulation and development conditions [22][23][24].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Acoustic emission (AE), also known as stress wave emission [1][2][3], refers to the deformation or crack propagation of the material locally under the action of external load or internal force; the transient strain energy generated during its failure process is rapidly released in the form of elastic waves [4,5]. Acoustic emission technology is an unconventional dynamic nondestructive testing method; with its unique dynamic and real-time detection performance [6], it can continuously monitor the internal damage and deformation of materials [7].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%