Experimental measurements of the global anisotropic elastic behaviour of dry Hostun sand during triaxial tests, and effect of sample preparation

Géotechnique ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 59 (7) ◽  
pp. 621-635 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. EZAOUI ◽  
H.DI BENEDETTO
1991 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 804-811 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. D. Eigenbrod ◽  
J. B. Burak

Previous studies of the varved sensitive clays from the Thunder Bay area indicated that the geotechnical properties were influenced by their layered structure. When sheared along the bedding planes, double strength envelopes were apparent, with strength parameters depending on the stress levels applied. Thus, a series of consolidated isotropical undrained triaxial tests with pore-pressure measurements was carried out on specimens with the varves inclined to the vertical axis. A number of unusual results were observed: (i) low B-values for presumably saturated samples; (ii) failure of the specimens along the clay seams at stress levels above precompression load, exhibiting highly compressive behaviour and considerable cohesion; (iii) failure of the specimens in the silt seams at stress levels below the precompression load, exhibiting dilatancy and a lower cohesion than in the normally consolidated range; (iv) slightly anisotropic elastic deformation behaviour almost up to failure for testing in the precompression range; however, strongly anisotropic, largely nonelastic behaviour in the normally consolidated stress range, indicating larger stiffnesses vertically than horizontally. The stress paths in the normally consolidated stress range suggested also that consolidation of the clay seams occurred during undrained shear owing to internal dissipation of pore pressures into dilating silt seams. Key words: varved sensitive cemented clay, pore-pressure response, undrained shear, internal pore-pressure dissipation, anisotropic elastic behaviour, critical-state conditions.


2014 ◽  
Vol 8 (11) ◽  
pp. 939-942 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yi Ding ◽  
Yanli Wang ◽  
Lin Shi ◽  
Zhongjie Xu ◽  
Jun Ni

Author(s):  
L. J. Walpole

1. Introduction. In studying the elastic behaviour of inhomogeneous systems certain inclusion and inhomogeneity problems are fundamental. In the ‘transformation problem’, a region (the ‘inclusion’) of an unbounded homogeneous anisotropic elastic medium would undergo some prescribed infinitesimal uniform strain (because of some spontaneous change in its shape) if it were not for the constraint imposed by the surrounding matrix. When the inclusion has an ellipsoidal shape, Eshelby (3, 4) was able to show that the stress and strain fields within the constrained inclusion are uniform and that calculations could be completed when the medium was isotropic. A generally anisotropic medium seemed to raise forbidding analyses, but Eshelby (3) did point the way to an evaluation of the uniform strain which several authors (referred to later) developed into an expression amenable to numerical computation. Here we offer an elementary and immediate route to this expression of the uniform strain, which has been accessible hitherto only by the circuitous procedures of Fourier transforms. It is available as soon as the uniform state of strain in the inclusion is perceived and before an alternative evaluation is commenced. First, we appeal to a theorem (not it seems previously known) which reveals (in particular) the vanishing of the mean strain in the infinitesimally thin ellipsoidal homoeoid lying just outside the inclusion. Secondly, we need only reflect that at each point of the interface there is an immediate algebraic expression of the strain just outside the inclusion in terms of the uniform strain just inside.


Clay Minerals ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 171-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Wensaas ◽  
P. Aagaard ◽  
T. Berre ◽  
E. Roaldset

AbstractIn the North Sea Tertiary section, wellbore instability problems are frequently reported in Palaeocene-Early Oligocene smectite-rich mudrocks. Analysis of the mechanical properties of these Tertiary mudrocks is generally hampered by the lack of suitable core material. This study represents an attempt to study the geomechanical behaviour of mudrocks by triaxial tests of side-wall cores obtained from the borehole wall. The tests performed include measuring the changes in pore pressure during shearing and undrained shear strength in specimens initially consolidated to in situ effective stress levels. The coefficients of permeability (kf), estimated from the consolidation time behaviour range from 2.6 x 10-11 to 2.4 x 10-12 m/s. The tested cores behaved like slightly overconsolidated to normally consolidated materials with an initial near constant volume (elastic behaviour) for low deviatoric load followed by an increasingly contractant behaviour approaching failure. Compared with results from onshore analogues, the strength properties of the investigated mudrocks appear to be related to their content of expandable clay minerals. A wellbore stability chart to forecast adequate drilling fluid pressures for future wells has been developed by the use of linear (Mohr-Coulomb) failure criteria based on the peak strength data. It is demonstrated that side-walt cores can provide satisfactory test materials for rock mechanical analysis, and their use may serve to improve our knowledge of the rock mechanical behaviour of typically troublesome mudrocks for which no conventional cores are available.


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