The study of rock fracture is important in understanding earthquakes and how microcracks contribute to reducing the strength and changing behaviour of critical engineering structures. Numerical computer models are a powerful tool for the investigation of rock fracture, especially when combined with observational validations. The European Commission Euratom research project, SAFETI, has developed and tested an innovative 3-D numerical modelling procedure for simulating nuclear waste repositories in rock. The code is called AC/DC (Adaptive Continuum/DisContinuum). As part of this project, geophysical validation has been conducted, in the laboratory and at field-scale studies. The paper presents example results obtained during the experiments and show comparisons to the computer models undertaken using AC/DC which have many similarities to the measured data.

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