Mechanical Properties of Rock Salt from the Kłodawa Salt Dome-A Statistical Analysis of Geomechanical Data.
Malwina KolanoMarek CałaAgnieszka StopkowiczPublished in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
Rock salt is a potential medium for underground storage of energy resources and radioactive substances due to its physical and mechanical properties, distinguishing it from other rock media. Designing storage facilities that ensure stability, tightness, and safety requires understanding the geomechanical properties of rock salt. Despite numerous research efforts on the behaviour of rock salt mass, many cases still show unfavourable phenomena occurring within it. Therefore, the formulation of strength criteria in a three-dimensional stress state and the prediction of deformation processes significantly impact the functionality of storage in salt caverns. This article presents rock salt's mechanical properties from the Kłodawa salt dome and a statistical analysis of the determined geomechanical data. The analysis is divided into individual mining fields (Fields 1-6). The analysis of numerical parameter values obtained in uniaxial compression tests for rock salt from mining Fields 1-6 indicates an average variation in their strength and deformation properties. Upon comparing the results of Young's modulus (E) with uniaxial compressive strength (UCS), its value was observed with a decrease in uniaxial compressive strength (E = 4.19968·UCS 2 , R-square = -0.61). The tensile strength of rock salt from mining Fields 1-6 also exhibits moderate variability. An increasing trend in tensile strength was observed with increased bulk density (σ t = 0.0027697·ρ - 4.5892, r = 0.60). However, the results of triaxial tests indicated that within the entire range of normal stresses, the process of increasing maximum shear stresses occurs linearly ((σ 1 - σ 3 )/2 = ((σ 1 + σ 3 )/2)·0.610676 + 2.28335, r = 0.92). A linear relationship was also obtained for failure stresses as a function of radial stresses (σ 1 = σ 3 ·2.51861 + 32.9488, r = 0.73). Based on the results, the most homogeneous rock salt was from Field 2 and Field 6, while the most variable rock salt was from Field 3.