Under stress, fractures in rock masses tend to form fully connected networks. The mass can thus be thought of as a 3D series of blocks produced by fragmentation processes. A numerical model has been developed that uses a relational database to describe such a mass. The model, which assumes the fractures to be plane, allows data from natural networks to test theories concerning fragmentation processes. In the model, blocks are bordered by faces that are composed of edges and vertices. A fracture can originate from a seed point, its orientation being controlled by the stress field specified by an orientation matrix. Alternatively, it can be generated from a discrete set of given orientations and positions. Both kinds of fracture can occur together in a model. From an original simple block, a given fracture produces two simple polyhedral blocks, and the original block becomes compound. Compound and simple blocks created throughout fragmentation are stored in the database. Several fragmentation processes have been studied. In one scenario, a constant proportion of blocks is fragmented at each step of the process. The resulting distribution appears to be fractal, although seed points are random in each fragmented block. In a second scenario, division affects only one random block at each stage of the process, and gives a Weibull volume distribution law. This software can be used for a large number of other applications.
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