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L o a d i n g
Experimental Determination of Friction Factors and Minimum Volumetric Requirements in Drilling

Experimental Determination of Solids Friction Factors and Minimum Volumetric Requirements in Air or Gas Drilling, Topical Report; August 1981

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Tags:
Geologyairaugustdeterminationdrillinexperimentalfactorfrictiongasminimumof solidsorreportrequirementtopicvolumetric
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National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL)about 1 year ago
Experimental Determination of Solids and Minimum Volumetric Requirements in Foam and Mist Drilling

Experimental Determination of Solids Friction Factors and Minimum Volumetric Requirements in Foam and Mist Drilling and Well Cleanout Operations, Final Report; September 1982

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Tags:
Geologydeterminationexperimentafoamfrictionmist drillingsolidswell cleanout
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PDF
National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL)about 1 year ago
Oscylator-4 Energy Converter St. Clair River Installation Data 2016Source

Data collected during the 2016 St. Clair River installation of the Oscylator-4 energy converter.

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3-D converterCECClair RiverFISH-MHKFISH-VIVACEHydrokineticMHKMarineMichiganPort HuronSt. Clair RiverVIVVIVACEVortexVortex Hydro Energybodybuoyancyconvertercoulombcurrentcurrent energycylinderdampingdatadeploymentdynamicenergyfield testfishfrictioninstallationmodelingoceanoscylatoroscylator-4powerriverschoolschool of fishshapedsimulationsynergistic kinematicstechnologytesttorquetransformativevortex induced vibrations
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National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Processed Lab Data for Neural Network-Based Shear Stress Level PredictionSource

Machine learning can be used to predict fault properties such as shear stress, friction, and time to failure using continuous records of fault zone acoustic emissions. The files are extracted features and labels from lab data (experiment p4679). The features are extracted with a non-overlapping window from the original acoustic data. The first column is the time of the window. The second and third columns are the mean and the variance of the acoustic data in this window, respectively. The 4th-11th column is the the power spectrum density ranging from low to high frequency. And the last column is the corresponding label (shear stress level). The name of the file means which driving velocity the sequence is generated from. Data were generated from laboratory friction experiments conducted with a biaxial shear apparatus. Experiments were conducted in the double direct shear configuration in which two fault zones are sheared between three rigid forcing blocks. Our samples consisted of two 5-mm-thick layers of simulated fault gouge with a nominal contact area of 10 by 10 cm^2. Gouge material consisted of soda-lime glass beads with initial particle size between 105 and 149 micrometers. Prior to shearing, we impose a constant fault normal stress of 2 MPa using a servo-controlled load-feedback mechanism and allow the sample to compact. Once the sample has reached a constant layer thickness, the central block is driven down at constant rate of 10 micrometers per second. In tandem, we collect an AE signal continuously at 4 MHz from a piezoceramic sensor embedded in a steel forcing block about 22 mm from the gouge layer The data from this experiment can be used with the deep learning algorithm to train it for future fault property prediction.

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Biaxial Shear ExperimentMATLABacoustic emissionsacousticsaiartificial intelligencebiaxial shear apparatuscodedeep learningenergyexperimentexperimental datafaultfault propertiesfrictiongeophysicsgeothermallab datamachine learningmicroseismicityprocessed dataseismicseismic forcastingseismic predictionshear stresstime to failure
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mat
National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago
Utah FORGE Hydrothermal Friction-Hydraulic Transmissivity Laboratory ExperimentsSource

Submission includes data from laboratory slide-hold-slide tests, combined with flow through tests, conducted on Westerly granite with 30 degree sawcut. Tests were conducted with a constant confining pressure of 30 MPa with an average pore pressure of 10 MPa at temperatures of 23 and 200 degC. Three fluid flow conditions were examined (1) no flow, (2) cycled flow, and (3) continuous flow. Data were collected to asses the effect of temperature and pore fluid on frictional healing rates in granite at geothermal conditions. Data is available in XML and JSON data types.

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Tags:
FORGEUtahUtah FORGEexperimentfailureflow testflow throughfluid flowfluid flow conditionsfrictionfriction hydraulic transmissivitygeothermalhydrauliclablaboratorypressureslide hold slidetemperaturetesttestingtestswesterly granite
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National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)about 1 year ago