Experimental Study on Damage Evolution Characteristics of Rock-Like Material

2019 ◽  
Vol 44 (10) ◽  
pp. 8503-8513
Author(s):  
Zhang Jinhao ◽  
Chen Hongkai ◽  
Wang He ◽  
Zhou Zheng
2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chunping Wang ◽  
Jianfeng Liu ◽  
Lu Wang

Understanding the damage evolution characteristics of rock material is essential to the long-term stability and safety analysis of the underground facility. In this study, a series of cyclic loading tests under tensile or compressive stresses are conducted to investigate the damage evolution, deformation, peak strength, and failure pattern of rock salt. A special attention is paid on the microcracking process by using a 3D acoustic emission (AE) test system. The laboratory tests show that the damage degree of rock salt under compression is the highest, followed by the damage in the direct tensile test. The lowest value of damage is determined by using the Brazilian test. The damage degrees where the damage rate starts to decrease are about 0.83 in the direct tensile test, about 0.75 in the Brazilian test, and about 0.91 in the compression test. The failure mode of rock salt changes from the tensile mode in the uniaxial compression test to the compression-shear mode in the confined compression test at low confinement. But from the confining pressure of 15 MPa, the rock salt displays great plastic dilatant distortion and without appreciable macroscopic fractures. Accordingly, with increasing confining pressure, the positions where the rapid increase in cumulative AE counts occurs and where the AE event with high energy appears are changed, from the beginning of the test at low confinement to the postpeak stage of the test at high confinement.


Author(s):  
Taesun You ◽  
Yong-Rak Kim ◽  
Taehyo Park

This paper presents a two-way linked computational multiscale model and its application to predict the mechanical behavior of bone subjected to viscoelastic deformation and fracture damage. The model is based on continuum thermos-mechanics and is implemented through the finite element method (FEM). Two physical length scales (the global scale of bone and local scale of compact bone) were two-way coupled in the framework by linking a homogenized global object to heterogeneous local-scale representative volume elements (RVEs). Multiscaling accounts for microstructure heterogeneity, viscoelastic deformation, and rate-dependent fracture damage at the local scale in order to predict the overall behavior of bone by using a viscoelastic cohesive zone model incorporated with a rate-dependent damage evolution law. In particular, age-related changes in material properties and geometries in bone were considered to investigate the effect of aging, loading rate, and damage evolution characteristics on the mechanical behavior of bone. The model successfully demonstrated its capability to predict the viscoelastic response and fracture damage due to different levels of aging, loading conditions (such as rates), and microscale damage evolution characteristics with only material properties of each constituent in the RVEs.


2018 ◽  
Vol 61 (12) ◽  
pp. 1882-1888
Author(s):  
ShaoLin Li ◽  
HongWei Yang ◽  
HongYu Qi ◽  
JiaNan Song ◽  
XiaoGuang Yang ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Anqi Zhu ◽  
Jianfeng Liu ◽  
Zhide Wu ◽  
Lu Wang ◽  
Hejuan Liu ◽  
...  

Salt rock has been regarded as the optimal surrounding rock for underground gas storage (UGS), and it is occasionally subjected to cyclic tension because of the gas injection and production of salt cavern, which leads to the change in mechanical properties of salt rock. In this paper, a laboratory study is conducted to investigate the energy dissipation and damage evolution characteristics of salt rock under uniaxial cyclic tension monitored by acoustic emission (AE) machine. Compared to monotonic tension, both tensile strength and deformation capacity of salt rock are enhanced under cyclic tension. The fracture crack is approximately a single linear crack with large elliptical plastic deformation zone, which is consistent with the spatial distribution of AE events. In yield stage, the proportion of dissipative energy increases first but decreases subsequently. The relationship between AE energy-based damage variable and displacement is established. It is concluded that the damage variable is a piecewise power correlation with displacement while the growth rate of damage variable increases in the pre-peak stage but decreases in post-peak stage.


2020 ◽  
Vol 137 ◽  
pp. 103850
Author(s):  
Srinivasan Echchur Rangarajan ◽  
Krishna Kumar Ramarathnam

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