Difference between revisions of "Ductility"

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Ductility is the amount of strain a seal can withstand before [[Brittleness|brittle failure]] and the loss of top seal integrity. Rocks with an extremely high ductility can deform without brittle failure. On the other hand, rocks with low ductility can accommodate only a small amount of strain before [[Fracture|fracturing]]. A seal can be brittle but unfractured; a seal can be ductile but fractured. Fracture depends upon whether the strain exceeds the seal ductility.<ref name=Skerlec>Skerlec, G. M., 1999, [http://archives.datapages.com/data/specpubs/beaumont/ch10/ch10.htm Evaluating top and fault seal], in E. A. Beaumont and N. H. Foster, Exploring for Oil and Gas Traps: [http://store.aapg.org/detail.aspx?id=545 AAPG Treatise in Petroleum Geology 3], pp. 10-1–10-94.</ref>
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Ductility is the amount of strain a seal can withstand before [[Brittleness|brittle failure]] and the loss of top seal integrity. Rocks with an extremely high ductility can deform without brittle failure. On the other hand, rocks with low ductility can accommodate only a small amount of strain before fracturing. A seal can be brittle but unfractured; a seal can be ductile but fractured. [[Fracture]] depends upon whether the strain exceeds the seal ductility.<ref name=Skerlec>Skerlec, G. M., 1999, [http://archives.datapages.com/data/specpubs/beaumont/ch10/ch10.htm Evaluating top and fault seal], in E. A. Beaumont and N. H. Foster, Exploring for Oil and Gas Traps: [http://store.aapg.org/detail.aspx?id=545 AAPG Treatise in Petroleum Geology 3], pp. 10-1–10-94.</ref>
  
 
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Latest revision as of 14:30, 27 January 2016

Ductility is the amount of strain a seal can withstand before brittle failure and the loss of top seal integrity. Rocks with an extremely high ductility can deform without brittle failure. On the other hand, rocks with low ductility can accommodate only a small amount of strain before fracturing. A seal can be brittle but unfractured; a seal can be ductile but fractured. Fracture depends upon whether the strain exceeds the seal ductility.[1]

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  1. Skerlec, G. M., 1999, Evaluating top and fault seal, in E. A. Beaumont and N. H. Foster, Exploring for Oil and Gas Traps: AAPG Treatise in Petroleum Geology 3, pp. 10-1–10-94.