A Model of Undrained Stress–Strain Curves Considering Stress Path and Strain Softening

2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (11) ◽  
pp. 04021213
Author(s):  
Mincai Jia ◽  
Wensen Luo ◽  
Yunhong Zhou ◽  
Shun Zhao ◽  
Zhen Zhang
2020 ◽  
Vol 858 ◽  
pp. 182-187
Author(s):  
Yu Dong Han ◽  
Zhen Bo Wang ◽  
Zi Jie Hong ◽  
Jian Ping Zuo ◽  
Chang Liu ◽  
...  

The brittleness and easiness to crack expose marine concrete to serious durability issues. Engineered Cementitious Composites (ECC), as a new generation of ultra high performance concrete, is expected to overcome the strain-softening properties of traditional concrete and realize function of crack-width control. In this paper, the sulfate erosion of ECC under drying-wetting cycles was modelled in laboratory test. And the compression test on cylinders after exposure to different erosion cycles was implemented to obtain the stress-strain properties. The results disclose that sulfate erosion imposes significant influence on both the nonlinear ascending and descending portions of the stress-strain properties of ECC. As the erosion period extended, ECC strength undergoes an obvious increase. And the descending section of the eroded ECC shows a significant stress drop, which is quite different from that before erosion. Additionally, a simple analytical model was proposed to provide satisfactory prediction of the stress-strain properties of ECC exposed to sulfate erosion.


1987 ◽  
Vol 54 (3) ◽  
pp. 513-518 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Belytschko ◽  
Xiao-Jun Wang ◽  
Z. P. Bazant ◽  
Y. Hyun

Closed-form solutions are presented for the transient response of rods in which strain softening occurs and the stress-strain laws exhibit nonvanishing stresses after the strain-softening regime. It is found that the appearance of any strain softening results in an infinite strain rate if the material is inviscid. For a stress-strain law with a monotonically decreasing stress the strains are infinite also. If the stress increases after the strain-softening portion, the strains remain finite and the strain-softening point moves through the rod.


2011 ◽  
Vol 48 (11) ◽  
pp. 1696-1712 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ariane Locat ◽  
Serge Leroueil ◽  
Stig Bernander ◽  
Denis Demers ◽  
Hans Petter Jostad ◽  
...  

Observations from past events are used to show that the concept of progressive failure may explain translational progressive landslides and spreads — large landslides occurring in sensitive clays. During progressive failure, the strain-softening behaviour of the soil causes unstable forces to propagate a failure surface further in the slope. Translational progressive landslides generally take place in long, gently inclined slopes. Instability in a steeper upslope area is followed by redistribution of stress, which increases earth pressure further downslope. Passive failure may therefore occur in less-inclined ground, heaving the soil. Spreads are usually trigged by erosion of a deposit having a higher angle near the toe. Instability starts near the toe of the slope and propagates into the deposit, reducing earth pressure. This may lead to the formation of an active failure with dislocation of the deposit into horsts and grabens. The failure mechanism of both types of landslides is controlled by the stresses in the slope and the stress–strain behaviour of the soil. The mechanism presented explains the sensitivity of a slope to minor disturbances and the resulting high retrogressions observed for such landslides in Scandinavia and eastern Canada.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Lin Wang ◽  
Wen-Chieh Cheng ◽  
Zhong-Fei Xue

Strata erosion in northwest China has become an engineering concern as a result of overdevelopment of land. This issue is more distinct for loess soil than other soils since it is characterised by metastable microstructure, high porosity, and water sensitivity. This study explores the potential for the use of agricultural waste straw as a recycled reinforcement material to form the enhanced shearing behaviour towards preventing instability of the loess body. The stress-strain relation and the pore pressure behaviour of Lantian loess and reinforced Lantian loess were studied using the conventional triaxial compression (CTC) stress path for three different confining pressures. Comparison with Jingyang loess and Delhi silt of similar relative fraction of silt to clay, sheared under the reduced triaxial compression (RTC) stress path and the reduced triaxial extension (RTE) stress paths, respectively, was conducted, with emphasis on strength uniqueness and critical state behaviour, to shed light on the effect of waste straw inclusions. The results indicate that the stress path in undrained compression and extension tests had a pronounced effect on the stress-strain relation of the studied soils. Insertion of the waste straw in Lantian loess restrained the development of volumetric deformation, producing higher pore pressures than Lantian loess (unreinforced). This study explores an exciting potential for the use of agricultural waste straw to prevent instability of the loess body in hilly-gullied regions of northwest China when subjected to quick surface thick fills.


2012 ◽  
Vol 602-604 ◽  
pp. 313-317
Author(s):  
Da Yong You ◽  
Yin Lan Bai

The test of 20MnSiV Ⅲ grade reinforced bar is carried out at room temperature and other nine temperatures: 100°C、200°C、300°C、400°C、500°C、600°C、700°C、800°C、900°C.The results show that, the highest impact absorbing energy 137J appeared when the test temperature is 200°C, while the lowest is 75.5J when the temperature is 600°C. While the test temperature is over 700°C and the sample is near damaged, strain softening and serious longitudinal extension is happened in the course of impact, and the gap of the sample can not result in the concentration of stress-strain, fracture mechanism of the material is changed, and then impact absorbing energy had no practical significance.


1985 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 357-374 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. J. Folkes ◽  
J. H. A. Crooks

Current methods of predicting the response of soft clays to surface loading are often unsuccessful because the assumed constitutive relationships, including effective stress path behaviour, are incorrect. In particular, the transition from small-strain to large-strain behaviour (i.e. yielding) is frequently not taken into account. Recent laboratory testing has demonstrated that the behaviour of soft clays is largely controlled by yielding. The locus of effective stress states causing yield is known as the yield envelope (YE).The effective stress paths (ESP's) in soft clay foundations below the centre of six fills were determined from computed total stresses and measured pore-water pressures. Yield behaviour is clearly indicated by ESP shapes. The yield envelopes inferred from analyses of field data are similar to those obtained from laboratory testing. Effective stress path shapes vary widely, depending on a variety of factors, including imposed stress level, rate of construction, and boundary drainage conditions. This finding contradicts an earlier conclusion that soft clay behaviour can be characterized by a single ESP. Because of the wide range of possible ESP shapes, the parameters [Formula: see text] does not provide an adequate basis for determining the effective stress state in a soft clay.The ESP/YE analyses indicate that yield can occur either during loading or during excess pore-water pressure dissipation following completion of loading. Yield of sensitive soils during loading is usually followed by strain softening. However, in some soils, dilatant behaviour appears to occur. Yield during dissipation of excess pore-water pressure is characterized by a dramatic change in cv and increased compressibility. Key words: soft clay, yield, effective stress paths, field behaviour, strain softening, rate of consolidation.


2008 ◽  
Vol 22 (31n32) ◽  
pp. 5590-5595 ◽  
Author(s):  
TOSHIMASA NAGAI ◽  
TAKESHI IWAMOTO ◽  
TOSHIYUKI SAWA ◽  
YASUHISA SEKIGUCHI ◽  
HIDEAKI KURAMOTO ◽  
...  

The impact deformation behavior and the strain sensitivity of structural adhesives are experimentally investigated by using INSTRON-type universal testing machine and split Hopkinson pressure bar apparatus. The experimental results show some fundamental features of the typical compressive stress-strain behavior of polymers with linear elastic and nonlinear inelastic deformation stages. In the inelastic deformation, the peak stress, and the strain-softening stage after the peak can be observed at the entire range of strain-rate from 10-4 to 103 /s. In addition, it can be found that the relationship between the peak stress at the strain-softening stage and strain-rate for a semi-logarithm curve is linear in a range of low strain rate, however, that becomes nonlinear at high strain rate. Finally, some constitutive models try to be applied for to describe the stress-strain behavior of structural adhesives.


2014 ◽  
Vol 580-583 ◽  
pp. 312-315
Author(s):  
Hui Mei Zhang ◽  
Xiang Miao Xie ◽  
Geng She Yang

From the feature of rock micro-unit failure obeys Poisson random distribution, the damage softening statistical constitutive of was established under true triaxial confinement based on D-P criterion, so the impact of the intermediate principal stress on rock deformation and failure was considered in theory, and the actual engineering rock complex stress path evolution was reflected more realistically. Furthermore, according to the geometrical conditions of stress-strain relationship, the theoretical relationship between constitutive model parameters and the stress-strain curve characteristic parameters during the process of rock softening and deforming, which enhance the adaptability of the model. Finally, the rationality of the model verified by the measured data.


2005 ◽  
Vol 495-497 ◽  
pp. 69-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
X.B. Wang

Peak strength, mechanical behavior, and shear band (SB) of anisotropic jointed rock (JR) were modeled by Fast Lagrangian Analysis of Continua (FLAC). The failure criterion of rock was a composite Mohr-Coulomb criterion with tension cut-off and the post-peak constitutive relation was linear strain-softening. An inclined joint was treated as square elements of ideal plastic material beyond the peak strength. A FISH function was written to find automatically elements in the joint. For the lower or higher joint inclination (JI), the higher peak strength and more apparent strain-softening behavior are observed; the failure of JR is due to the slip along the joint and the new generated SBs initiated at joint’s two ends. For the lower JI, the slope of softening branch of stress-strain curve is not concerned with JI since the new and longer SBs’s inclination is not dependent on JI, as can be qualitatively explained by previous analytical solution of post-peak slope of stress-strain curve for rock specimen subjected to shear failure in uniaxial compression based on gradient-dependent plasticity. For the higher JI, the post-peak stress-strain curve becomes steeper as JI increases since the contribution of the new SBs undergoing strain-softening behavior to axial strain of JR increases with JI. For the moderate JI, the lower strength and ideal plastic behavior beyond the elastic stage are found, reflecting that the inclined joint governs the deformation of JR. The present numerical prediction on anisotropic peak strength in plane strain compression qualitatively agrees with triaxial experimental tests of many kinds of rocks. Comparison of the present numerical prediction on JI corresponding to the minimum peak strength of JR and the oversimplified theoretical result by Jaeger shows that Jaeger’s formula has overestimated the value of JI.


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