scholarly journals Uniaxial Experimental Study of the Deformation Behavior and Energy Evolution of Conjugate Jointed Rock Based on AE and DIC Methods

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Jiliang Pan ◽  
Xu Wu ◽  
Qifeng Guo ◽  
Xun Xi ◽  
Meifeng Cai

Conjugate joint is one of the most common joint forms in natural rock mass, which is produced by different tectonic movements. To better understand the preexisting flaws, it is necessary to investigate joint development and its effect on the deformation and strength of the rock. In this study, uniaxial compression tests of granite specimens with different conjugate joints distribution were performed using the GAW-2000 compression-testing machine system. The PCI-2 acoustic emission (AE) testing system was used to monitor the acoustic signal characteristics of the jointed specimens during the entire loading process. At the same time, a 3D digital image correlation (DIC) technique was used to study the evolution of stress field before the peak strength at different loading times. Based on the experimental results, the deformation and strength characteristics, AE parameters, damage evolution processes, and energy accumulation and dissipation properties of the conjugate jointed specimens were analyzed. It is considered that these changes were closely related to the angle between the primary and secondary joints. The results show that the AE counts can be used to characterize the damage and failure of the specimen during uniaxial compression. The local stress field evolution process obtained by the DIC can be used to analyze the crack initiation and propagation in the specimen. As the included angle increases from 0° to 90°, the elastic modulus first decreases and then increases, and the accumulative AE counts of the peak first increase and then decrease, while the peak strength does not change distinctly. The cumulative AE counts of the specimen with an included angle of 45° rise in a ladder-like manner, and the granite retains a certain degree of brittle failure characteristics under the axial loading. The total energy, elastic energy, and dissipation energy of the jointed specimens under uniaxial compression failure were significantly reduced. These findings can be regarded as a reference for future studies on the failure mechanism of granite with conjugate joints.

2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. M. He ◽  
F. Pang ◽  
H. T. Wang ◽  
J. W. Zhu ◽  
Y. S. Chen

The energy conversion in rocks has an important significance for evaluation of the stability and safety of rock engineering. In this paper, some uniaxial compression tests for fifteen different rocks were performed. The evolution characteristics of the total energy, elastic energy, and dissipated energy for the fifteen rocks were studied. The dissipation energy coefficient was introduced to study the evolution characteristics of rock. The evolution of the dissipation energy coefficient for different rocks was investigated. The linear interrelations of the dissipation energy coefficients and the yield strength and peak strength were explored. The method was proposed to determine the strength of rock using the dissipation energy coefficients. The results show that the evolution of the dissipation energy coefficient exhibits significant deformation properties of rock. The dissipation energy coefficients linearly increase with the compaction strength, but decrease with the yield strength and peak strength. Moreover, the dissipation energy coefficient can be used to determine the rock burst proneness and crack propagation in rocks.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Liu ◽  
Hansheng Geng ◽  
Hongfa Xu ◽  
Yinhao Yang ◽  
Linjian Ma ◽  
...  

Abstract The rock contains many inclusions which produce high locked-in stress under the ground stress. In order to study the influence of locked-in stress on the mechanical properties of rocks, the rock-like materials and nitrile rubber particles are used to make a test block of the rock-like model which contains inclusions. The rubber particles will expand as the test block is heated, which creates locked-in stress in the inclusions. Uniaxial compression tests of similar model blocks with different locked-in stresses and different inclusion contents were performed by using a water bath and MTS-5T uniaxial compression testing machine. The results show that the peak strength and elastic modulus decreased with the increasement of locked-in stress and inclusion content. In the meantime, the relationship among the peak strength, the elastic modulus of the test piece, the locked-in stress and the inclusion content were obtained with the help of a mathematical fitting analysis of the quantitative formula. Furthermore, the expression and value curve of the joint impact factor are calculated. This paper evaluates the importance of the locked-in stress in the mechanical properties of the rock-like material and provide a guide for other researchers to further investigate the locked-in stress in rocks.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tao Zhou ◽  
Haijun Chen ◽  
Liangxiao Xiong ◽  
Zhongyuan Xu ◽  
Jie Yang ◽  
...  

Abstract To study the influence of the inclination and length of Z-shaped fissures on the mechanical properties and failure characteristics of the rock mass, this study conducts a series of uniaxial compression tests on rock-like materials with prefabricated Z-shaped fractures. In addition, two-dimensional Particle Flow Code software is used to perform uniaxial compression numerical simulations. The results show that when the specified inclination angle γ (γ = 0°, 30° or 45°) of the parallel cracks on both sides remains unchanged, the peak strength and elastic modulus of the sample show an M-shaped change trend with an increase in the inclination angle β of the middle connection crack. When γ = 60° or 90°, however, the peak strength and elastic modulus of the sample show a trend of decreasing, increasing, and then decreasing as β increases. In addition, the peak strength and elastic modulus of the sample decrease with an increase in the crack length. The influence of crack length on the elastic modulus is less than that of compressive strength. Further, the main failure mode of specimens with Z-shaped cracks is determined to be tension–shear mixed failure manifested by crack propagation from the tip of the prefabricated crack to the upper and lower boundaries of the sample. As a result, a through failure surface is formed with the prefabricated crack, which destroys the sample.


2013 ◽  
Vol 353-356 ◽  
pp. 856-859
Author(s):  
Lei Wang ◽  
Shi Chen Li ◽  
Jian Xin Han ◽  
Zhong Yi Zeng

The relationship between the peak strength of rock masses and joint inclination angle is closely, to study its relationship, experiment on pre-existing persistent jointed rock cylindrical standard specimens was made under uniaxial compression by high stiffness servo control testing machine, experiment found that: the residual peak intensity and peak strength are increased with the decrease of jointed and nonlinear. Analysis on the peak intensity changing with the fissure inclination using Kulun strength theory, theory analysis conclusion is consistent with the experiment, prove the conclusions of experiments and theoretical analysis all can reflect the law of rock masses with transfixion joint failure strength well.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Zhenhua Wang ◽  
Jun Fang ◽  
Gang Wang ◽  
Yifan Jiang ◽  
Dongwei Li

The uniaxial compression tests were conducted on granite samples with different joint dip angles to more favorably explore the influences of the nonconsecutive joint on mechanical properties and deformation characteristics of the rock mass. The stress-strain curves, deformation and strength characteristics, and energy evolution process of the samples were analyzed. Numerical simulation using particle flow code (PFC) is employed to study the crack propagation process. The mode of jointed and fractured rock was investigated. The research results showed a significant reduction in both the peak strength and elastic modulus of jointed samples compared with intact ones: the peak strength and elastic modulus drop to the minimum at the joint dip angle of about 45°, especially for the peak strength, which takes up about 55% of the intact samples. The fractured samples’ total energy, elastic strain energy, and dissipated energy during the uniaxial compression drop significantly relative to intact samples. The proportion of the fracture modes varies with different joint dip angles, in which the ratio of shear cracks grows at first and then declines, with the highest balance at the dip angle of 45°. The damage stress’s sensitivity to the dip angle change is greater than that of the peak stress, with reduction amplitude more extensive than the latter.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (21) ◽  
pp. 7621
Author(s):  
Quanqi Zhu ◽  
Diyuan Li

To study the effect of strength, stiffness and inclination angle of square inclusions on failure characteristics of rock, uniaxial compression tests were carried out on prismatic sandstone containing a square hole with different filling modes and hole angles using a servo-hydraulic loading system. Digital image correlation and acoustic emission techniques were jointly applied to analyze the damage and fracture process, and the crack stress thresholds were determined qualitatively and quantitatively by combining the stress–strain behavior. The results show that the mechanical properties and crack stress thresholds of pre-holed specimens increase with the increase of the strength and stiffness of inclusions, and are affected by the hole angle. Rock failure is mainly caused by secondary crack propagation and shear crack coalescence, eventually forming mixed tensile-shear failure. The crack behavior, especially the crack initiation position, is affected by the filling mode and the hole angle. Interface debonding tends to initiate at the vertical interface, while interface slipping tends to propagate along the inclined interface. Under identical loading conditions, the specimen with 45° hole is more susceptible to crack and damage than that with 0° hole. Notably, inclusions can inhibit the hole deformation and the fracture of rock matrix, especially the sidewall spalling of 0° hole.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shengli Li ◽  
Guangming Wu ◽  
Hao Wu

Acoustic emission testing of semirigid base specimens subjected to uniaxial compression was performed by a mechanical testing machine and AE system to find the AE criterion of the uniaxial compressive failure process of the semirigid base of dense skeleton types. AE counts, cumulative AE energy, andb-value were discussed. Results indicated that the AE parameters could reflect the failure process of semirigid bases of dense skeleton types. The failure process mainly underwent three stages that were divided based on AE parameters into initial stage of development, stable growth stage, and unstable stage. The knees of the AE parameter curve were at 25% and 85% of the ultimate load. The variation of theb-value could indicate the stress and be a precursor to the failure of the specimens. In general terms, ab-value greater than 3.5 indicates that specimens are at the initial stage of development. Ab-value between 1 and 2 indicates that the specimens are at the stable growth stage. If theb-value seems to fluctuate and increase, the specimens are at the unstable stage. Moreover, the AE parameters indicated that attaching sensors to the waist of specimens was superior to that at other locations of a specimen.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan Cheng ◽  
Paul Hagan ◽  
Rudrajit Mitra ◽  
Shuren Wang ◽  
Hong-Wei Yang

In this paper, the potential of 3D acoustic emission (AE) tomography technique in demonstrating fracture development and delineating stress conditions was examined. Brazilian tests and uniaxial compression tests were monitored by 3D AE tomography. AE counts, AE source locations and 3D tomographic images of locally varying velocity distributions were analyzed along with stress and strain measurements. Experimental results revealed two distinct failure processes between Brazilian tests and uniaxial compression tests indicated by differences in AE counts, source locations and the temporal variation of velocity. Furthermore, the development of micro-cracks showed by the results correlated well with theoretical analysis and experimental observations. Additionally, stress patterns, failure modes and final failure planes were indicated by AE locations and velocity tomography. Three-dimensional velocity tomographic images indicated the anisotropy of samples caused by stresses as well. These results confirm the usefulness of AE tomography as a method to monitor stress induced failure and the potential of AE tomography for delineating stress conditions and predicting rock failure.


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