Influence of the intermediate principal stress on the stress–strain–strength behaviour of a completely decomposed granite soil

Géotechnique ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 62 (3) ◽  
pp. 275-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. KUMRUZZAMAN ◽  
J.-H. YIN
2010 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 164-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
Md. Kumruzzaman ◽  
Jian-Hua Yin

The measurement and study of the stress–strain–strength behaviour of soils in general stress states involving the change of magnitudes and direction of the principal stresses are necessary and important. To investigate the strength behaviour under such conditions, consolidated undrained tests on remoulded hollow cylinder specimens of completely decomposed granite (CDG) were carried out using a hollow cylinder apparatus. Tests were conducted by maintaining a fixed principal stress direction with angle α from the vertical direction together with a fixed value of intermediate principal stress coefficient b. It is observed that the value of the friction angle decreases with an increase in α and the failure surface is anisotropic. There is an increase in friction angle with an increase in b value up to b = 0.25, and the friction angles are almost the same for b > 0.25. In addition, the behaviour of the soil in an undrained simple shear condition was examined. The simple shear condition is very near to the condition of α = 45° and b = 0.25. After having analyzed the test results of all hollow cylinder specimens, it was found that the strength anisotropy is very strong and is dependent on the principal stress direction and intermediate principal stress coefficient.


1968 ◽  
Vol 8 (03) ◽  
pp. 304-312 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.A. Mahtab ◽  
R.E. Goodman

ABSTRACT The state of stress around a vertical wellbore in rock following nonlinear stress-strain laws is examined by means of finite element analysis. The wellbore is considered an axisymmetric body with axisymmetric loading. The initial vertical and horizontal stresses are "locked" in the rock elements around the wellbore and a new state of stress is generated by the displacements which occur around the borehole. A point-wise variation of the elastic moduli is made on the basis of the new stress state and the triaxial data. The initial stresses are now reintroduced along with the changed moduli and original boundary constraints. This procedure is repeated until convergent stresses are reached. The effect of nonlinearity on stresses is examined for a 6,000-ft wellbore in a schistose gneiss and Berea sandstone using results of laboratory triaxial compression tests. The results show that the effect is restricted to one well radius from the bottom periphery of the hole. Beyond a distance of one-quarter radius, the effect of nonlinearity on stresses is almost always less than 5 percent for the cases considered. The consideration of a static pressure inside the well does not magnify the effect of nonlinearity on borehole stresses. INTRODUCTION The terms "wellbore" and "borehole" here designate cylindrical openings in the ground with vertical axis and a circular cross-section. A knowledge of the stress redistribution that occurs on excavating a wellbore is important in understanding the behavior of the lined or unlined hole, hydraulic fracture response, and the effect of stress redistribution on drillability; also it is important in predicting initial stresses in the virgin ground, and in analyzing the response of measuring instruments placed in the borehole. Our knowledge of the state of stress around a wellbore has been restricted to homogeneous, isotropic, elastic material and derives chiefly from the analysis by Miles and Topping1 and the photoelastic work of Galle and Wilhoit2 and Word and Wilhoit.3 In this investigation the state of stress is examined for a nonlinear elastic material by means of finite element analysis. Many rocks possess stress-strain curves that depart notably from straight lines in their initial or final portions. While the literature contains abundant stress-strain data from triaxial tests (axisymmetric loading) on cylindrical rock specimens, there is little information on rock deformability under nonaxisymmetric loading conditions such as occur at each point around the bottom of a wellbore. Although there is some knowledge of the effect of intermediate principal stress on rock strength, there is virtually nothing known about its effect on rock deformability; therefore, we have assumed here that the effect of intermediate principal stress can be ignored. A schistose gneiss4 and Berea sandstone5 were selected as representative rocks for this analysis. The traditional graphs of deviator stress (s1-s3) vs axial strain were reworked to give the tangent modulus as a function of the deviator stress for varying values of the minor principal stress. The result is a nesting family of skewed, bell-shaped curves for the gneiss (Fig. 1A) and the sandstone (Fig. 2A). A similar replotting of the lateral strain data defines the variation of Poisson's ratio (?) with the deviator stress and confining pressure. These curves, shown in Fig. 1B for the gneiss and in Fig. 2B for the sandstone, are not so well ordered as the tangent modulus curves. However, all of these display an increase of ? with deviator stress application, but the rate of increase diminishes with confinement. The ET and ? curves for the two rock types are tabulated in Tables 1A and 1B for use in a digital computer so that material properties corresponding to a given state of stress can be assigned by interpolation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Yanru Zhao ◽  
Tiande Wen ◽  
Xiaohui Sun ◽  
Liping Huang ◽  
Rui Chen

Mechanical properties of intact completely decomposed granite (CDG) soil, widely distributed in South China, decrease drastically as encountering external load-related disturbance or soaked by water. In this study, staged triaxial consolidated drained (CD) test and microscopic scanning were conducted using intact CDG specimens extracted from a construction site to investigate the mechanical behavior and microscopic pore distribution. The results show that the stress-strain relationship reveals a shrinking behavior in the first-stage loading and a brittle behavior in the second-stage loading. The development of cracks is affected by the principal stress, which causes the pores and cracks to shrink or partially close. In addition, Esec-1 increases linearly with the increase of confining pressure, but Esec-2 decreases exponentially.


2010 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 79-97 ◽  
Author(s):  
Md. Kumruzzaman ◽  
Jian-Hua Yin

The measurement and study of the stress-strain-strength behavior of soils in general stress states involving principal stress rotation are necessary and valuable. To investigate the strength behavior under principal stress rotation, a series of undrained tests on compacted hollow cylinder specimens of completely decomposed granite (CDG) was carried in hollow cylinder apparatus. Tests were conducted using constant inside and outside pressures and maintained a fixed angle of rotation of principal stress with the vertical (?). Seven different angles of major principal stress orientations were used to cover the entire range of major principal stress directions from vertical to the horizontal. Two different confining stresses were used to find out the variations of the experimental results. It is observed that the deviator stresses as well as excess pore pressures decrease with the angle ?. It is also observed that specimens were getting softer with the increase of ?. The results also show a significant influence of principal stress direction angle on the strength parameters. It is found that the angle ? is related to the occurrence of cross-anisotropy and the localization which resulted in a pronounced influence on the strength parameters of the CDG specimens.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 85
Author(s):  
Jinwang Li ◽  
Xiufeng He ◽  
Caihua Shen ◽  
Xiangtian Zheng

Past studies on deep-lying tunnels under the assumption of plane strain have generally neglected the influence of intermediate principal stress even though this affects the surrounding rocks in the plastic zone. This study proposes a finite difference method to compute the stress strain plastic region and displacement of a tunnel based on the Drucker–Prager (D–P) yield criterion and non-associated flow rule and considering the influences of intermediate principal stress and the strain-softening behavior of surrounding rock. The computed results were compared with those of other well-known solutions and the accuracy and validity of the method were confirmed through some examples. Parameter analysis was conducted to investigate the effects of intermediate principal stress on stress-strain, the plastic region, the ground response curve, and the dilatability of surrounding rock. The results showed that the plastic radius , the residual radius , and radial displacement of surrounding rock first decreased and then increased with increasing intermediate principal stress coefficient b from 0 to 1, with the minimums occurring at b = 0.75. On the contrary, the peak and rate of variation of the dilatancy coefficient first increased and then decreased with increasing b and the dilatancy coefficient gradually transitioned from nonlinear to linear variation. Meanwhile, the inhibition of the plastic radius and radial displacement gradually weakened with increasing support pressure, whereas the dilatancy coefficient of the tunnel opening gradually increased.


1996 ◽  
Vol 33 (5) ◽  
pp. 822-828 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Sãyao ◽  
Y P Vaid

An experimental investigation of the relevance of the intermediate principal stress (σ2) on the deformation response of a sand is presented. The effects of σ2 are conveniently studied through the nondimensional stress parameter b = (σ2 – σ3)/(σ1 – σ3). A series of stress path tests was performed on Ottawa sand specimens in a hollow cylinder torsional shear device. The experimental program includes shear loading at different values of b, and special b tests, in which b was continuously varied at different stress directions. It is shown that the b value may have a significant influence on the stress–strain response of sand, depending on the loading conditions. Key words: hollow cylinder tests, generalized stress paths, sand, stress–strain behaviour, intermediate principal stress.


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