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Experimental investigation of surface energy and subcritical crack growth in calcite

Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres 2011 125 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Anja Røyne, Anja Røyne, Anja Røyne, Jan Bisschop, Jan Bisschop, Dag Kristian Dysthe

Summary

Laboratory experiments on calcite crystals showed that water content in surrounding fluids affects subcritical crack growth rates and surface energy of the mineral. This geomechanics study on rock fracture processes has no direct connection to microplastics research.

[1] Subcritical cracking behavior and surface energies are important factors in geological processes, as they control time-dependent brittle processes and the long-term stability of rocks. In this paper, we present experimental data on subcritical cracking in single calcite crystals exposed to glycol-water mixtures with varying water content. We find upper bounds for the surface energy of calcite that decrease with increasing water concentration and that are systematically lower than values obtained from molecular dynamics simulations. The relation of surface energy to water concentration can explain water weakening in chalks. The rate of subcritical crack growth in calcite is well described by a reaction rate model. The effect of increasing water on crack velocity is to lower the threshold energy release rate required for crack propagation. The slope of the crack velocity curve remains unaffected, something which strongly suggests that the mechanism for subcritical cracking in calcite does not depend on the water concentration.

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