Effect of water content on the mechanical properties and deformation characteristics of the clay-bearing red sandstone

Author(s):  
Shibing Huang ◽  
Yingbo He ◽  
Guofeng Liu ◽  
Zexin Lu ◽  
Zekun Xin
2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yongjun Song ◽  
Leitao Zhang ◽  
Huimin Yang ◽  
Jianxi Ren ◽  
Yongxin Che

In cold regions, the deformation characteristics and long-term mechanical properties of rocks under low-temperature conditions are considerably different from those in other regions. To study the deformation characteristics and long-term mechanical properties of rocks in a low-temperature environment and the effect of different temperatures, we perform a multilevel loading-unloading uniaxial creep test on red sandstone samples and obtain the creep curves at different temperatures (20°C, −10°C, and −20°C). The results demonstrate that the total strain at each temperature can be divided into instantaneous and creep strains; the instantaneous strain includes instantaneous elastic and plastic strains, and the creep strain includes viscoelastic and viscoplastic strains. Temperature has a significant effect on the deformation properties of red sandstone. A decrease in temperature reduces the instantaneous and creep deformations of the rocks at all levels of stress. In addition, a decrease in temperature exponentially attenuates the total creep and viscoplastic strains of the rocks. 0°C is a critical point for the reduction of the total creep and viscoplastic strains of the rocks. When the temperature is greater than 0°C, the total creep and viscoplastic strains of the rocks decrease rapidly and linearly with decrease in temperature; however, when the temperature is less than 0°C, the decrease in the total creep and viscoplastic strains of the rocks is slow. The steady-state creep rate of the rock samples decreases with decrease in temperature, whereas the creep duration increases with decrease in temperature, especially in the case of the accelerated creep stage. The accelerated creep durations of the rock samples S4 (20°C) and S7 (–10°C) are 0.07 h and 0.23 h, respectively.


Materials ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (17) ◽  
pp. 2837 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jikai Zhou ◽  
Yuanzhi Liang

To study the effect of water on the dynamic mechanical properties of calcium silicate hydrate (C–S–H) at the atomic scale, the molecular dynamics simulations were performed in uniaxial tension with different strain rates for C–S–H with a degree of saturation from 0% to 100%. Our calculations demonstrate that the dynamic tensile mechanical properties of C–S–H decrease with increasing water content and increase with increasing strain rates. With an increase in the degree of saturation, the strain rate sensitivity of C–S–H tends to increase. According to Morse potential function, the tensile stress-strain relationship curves of C–S–H are decomposed and fitted, and the dynamic tensile constitutive relationship of C–S–H considering the effect of water content is proposed. This reveals the strain rate effect of the cementitious materials with different water content from molecular insights, and the dynamic constitutive relationship obtained in this paper is necessary to the modelling of cementitious materials at the meso-scale.


2008 ◽  
Vol 182 (3) ◽  
pp. 436-443 ◽  
Author(s):  
Irina E. Raschip ◽  
Iryna Yakimets ◽  
Christopher P. Martin ◽  
Sabrina S. Paes ◽  
Cornelia Vasile ◽  
...  

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