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      Feasibility of constructing a full-scale radioactive high-level waste disposal cell and characterization of its thermo-hydro-mechanical behavior

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          Numerical formulation for a simulator (CODE_BRIGHT) for the coupled analysis of saline media

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            Nonisothermal multiphase flow of brine and gas through saline media

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              Effects of mineral distribution at mesoscopic scale on solute diffusion in a clay‐rich rock: Example of the Callovo‐Oxfordian mudstone (Bure, France)

              The mesostructure (millimeter to micrometer scale) of clay‐rich sedimentary rocks is generally characterized by a connected fine‐grained clay matrix embedding coarser nonclay minerals. We use the Callovo‐Oxfordian clay‐rich rock formation (France) to illustrate how mesostructure influences solute transfer in clay‐rich rocks at larger scales. Using micrometer resolution imaging techniques (SEM and micro‐CT) major mineral phases (clay matrix, carbonates, tectosilicates, and heavy minerals) were mapped both in two dimensional (2‐D) and three dimensional (3‐D) at the mesoscale. Orientation and elongation distributions of carbonate and tectosilicate grains measured on mineral maps reveal an anisotropic mesostructure relative to the bedding plane, in agreement with the geological history of the sedimentary rock. Diffusion simulations were performed based on the 3‐D mineral maps using a random walk method thus allowing direct computation of mesoscopic scale‐related diffusion anisotropy and tortuosity. Considering an isotropic clay matrix, simulated diffusion anisotropy (1.11–1.26) was found lower than the one experimentally measured on macroscopic samples (1.5 to 2), due to the anisotropy feature of pores within the clay matrix. The effects of the mineral content variations on diffusion properties were then investigated by numerical modifications of a mineral map combined with diffusion simulations. Evolution of the tortuosity and diffusion anisotropy with the clay matrix content were successfully interpreted by the Koponen percolation/diffusion model, whereas the Archie approach fails to reproduce diffusion properties at low clay contents. A comparison of fitting parameters with those obtained experimentally indicates that diffusion coefficient variations observed at a large scale could be mainly controlled by the mesostructure. The 3D mesoscale struture of the Callovo‐Oxfordian formation was imaged Carbonate and tectosilicate arrangements influence the diffusion properties In clay rocks, Archie's law can be related to changes in mineral contents
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences
                International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences
                Elsevier BV
                13651609
                January 2021
                January 2021
                : 137
                : 104555
                Article
                10.1016/j.ijrmms.2020.104555
                463134e5-78d4-4a4b-99b7-9c0b1adef427
                © 2021

                https://www.elsevier.com/tdm/userlicense/1.0/

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