Characterization of rock joint surface degradation under shear loads

2004 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 380-381 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Unal ◽  
B. Unver
2017 ◽  
Vol 50 (10) ◽  
pp. 2827-2836 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Gui ◽  
Caichu Xia ◽  
Wenqi Ding ◽  
Xin Qian ◽  
Shigui Du

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Man Huang ◽  
Chenjie Hong ◽  
Chengrong Ma ◽  
Zhanyou Luo ◽  
Shigui Du

Abstract Anisotropy in rock joint is strongly dependent on undulating surface morphology. Recent research of the morphology showed the parameter can express the different types of anisotropic characteristics of the joint surface separately. This report aims to analyze the common characteristic of the anisotropic distribution and exhibit the anisotropic variation trend. The joint morphology function consists of two morphology functions of regular plane in orthogonal directions, and the anisotropic variation determined by the contribution ratios of the two morphology. The roughness weight ratio in orthogonal direction of joint surface is used as an index to describe the anisotropic variation behavior, which proposes the anisotropic variation coefficient (AVC). On this basis, it is divided into 5 levels from strong anisotropic to isotropic. According to the assumption of anisotropic arc distribution, the anisotropic analytic function is derived and the agreement between the deduced curves and measured data therefore suggests the possibility of defining the morphology anisotropy through the index AVC. Finally, we verify the characteristic of three natural rock joints, and prove the proposed function can reflect the anisotropic distribution trend. The new index can be used to describe the anisotropic variation behaviour of rock joint surfaces.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jihong Wei ◽  
Yan Men ◽  
Shaorui Sun ◽  
Huilin Le ◽  
Feng Zhu

A set of systematic experimental methods, including 3D accuracy scanning and identification of discontinuous surface topography, physical model construction, and laboratory direct shear experiment under different directions and normal stresses, was proposed to research the influence of discontinuity roughness on strength and deformation of discontinuity. During physical model construction of discontinuity, three types of discontinuity and rough natural rock joint surface models were constructed and moulded. Meanwhile, many influence factors of discontinuity surface topography, such as asperity inclination angle (AIA), asperity height (AH), normal stress (NS), and shear direction (SD), were considered during the direct shear experiment. On the basis of the experimental results, it can be found that there were two types of failure modes under different loading conditions, which were named “failure by shearing through the asperities” and “failure by sliding over the asperities”. The obvious stress concentration phenomenon, climbing, and cutting effects appeared in the process of the direct shear experiment. In addition, the accurate identification of surface topography of natural rough rock joint surface was carried out using three-dimensional sensing system (3DSS) and self-programming software before and after the experiment. The subsamples with the same surface topography as the original samples were moulded using a self-developed instrument. Then, the mechanical behavior of the original samples and subsamples for the natural rough rock joint surface under different shear directions and normal stresses was studied. The results show that the shear displacement under different shear directions and normal stresses is very large before it reaches the failure state. And the residual strength of the original samples is higher than that of the subsamples. In addition, failure modes of the subsamples are main failure by shearing through the asperities due to the significant difference between peak shear strength and residual strength. The failure modes for parts of the original samples are failure by sliding over the asperities. The change ratio of area for the discontinuity after the experiment depends on surface topography, strength of heave on the surface of discontinuity, and particle size of minerals on the surface of discontinuity.


Geofluids ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-18
Author(s):  
Yingchun Li ◽  
Shengyue Sun ◽  
Hongwei Yang

The scale dependence of surface roughness is critical in characterising the hydromechanical properties of field-scale rock joints but is still not well understood, particularly when different orders of roughness are considered. We experimentally reveal the scale dependence of two-order roughness, i.e., waviness and unevenness through fractal parameters using the triangular prism surface area method (TPM). The surfaces of three natural joints of granite with the same dimension of 1000 mm×1000 mm are digitised using a 3D laser scanner at three different measurement resolutions. Waviness and unevenness are quantitatively separated by considering the area variation of joint surface as grid size changes. The corresponding fractal dimensions of waviness and unevenness in sampling window sizes ranging from 100 mm×100 mm to 1000 mm×1000 mm at an interval of 100 mm×100 mm are determined. We find that both the fractal dimensions of waviness and unevenness vary as the window size increases. No obvious stationarity threshold has been found for the three rock joint samples, indicating the surface roughness of natural rock joints should be quantified at the scale of the rock mass in the field.


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