Mobilised strength components in brittle failure of rock

被引:6
|
作者
Hajiabdolmajid, V [1 ]
Kaiser, P
Martin, CD
机构
[1] Laurentian Univ, Geomech Res Ctr, Sudbury, ON P3E 2C6, Canada
[2] Univ Alberta, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Edmonton, AB, Canada
来源
GEOTECHNIQUE | 2003年 / 53卷 / 03期
关键词
excavation; rocks/rock mechanics;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
P5 [地质学];
学科分类号
0709 ; 081803 ;
摘要
In deep underground excavations in hard rocks where stresses easily exceed the micro-crack initiation stress level inside the rock mass, proper consideration of the behaviour of rockmass during the brittle fracturing process in constitutive modelling is of paramount importance. Current empirical and conventional experimental methods for obtaining the deformational behaviours of hard rocks under loading do not lead to results that can be matched with in situ failure observations. This paper demonstrates that this problem is not necessarily a matter of the general notion of size effect but rather can be related to the different circumstances under which the cohesive and frictional strength components are mobilized in laboratory compression tests and around underground openings. It is also demonstrated that the propagation of the failed or breakout zone (depth and extent) is a function of the strain-dependent brittleness index I-Bepsilon, introduced in this paper, which explicitly considers the relative delay in friction mobilization relative to the rate of cohesion loss as functions of plastic strain. This new brittleness index characterizes the entire stress-strain curve (pre- to post-peak stages) and represents the involved micro-mechanisms during the brittle failure process: that is, initiation, propagation, and coalescence of cracks. This study shows that brittleness of rock is the most dominant factor, in controlling breakout shape, which explains the failure of stress-based criteria adopted by many researchers in predicting the stress-induced breakout depth around openings.
引用
收藏
页码:327 / 336
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Brittle rock strength failure: Laboratory and in situ
    Martin, CD
    EIGHTH INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS ON ROCK MECHANICS, VOL 3, PROCEEDINGS, 1997, : 1033 - 1040
  • [2] Research of Brittle Shear Failure Strength of Rock Materials
    Li, Yuan
    Li, Zhen
    Xu, Tiejun
    RESEARCH ON MECHANICAL ENGINEERING, CIVIL ENGINEERING AND MATERIAL ENGINEERING, 2014, 454 : 125 - +
  • [3] Rock mass strength parameters mobilised in tunnels
    Singh, B
    Viladkar, MN
    Samadhiya, NK
    Mehrotra, VK
    TUNNELLING AND UNDERGROUND SPACE TECHNOLOGY, 1997, 12 (01) : 47 - 54
  • [4] Modelling brittle failure of rock
    Hajiabdolmajid, V
    Martin, CD
    Kaiser, PK
    PACIFIC ROCKS 2000: ROCK AROUND THE RIM, 2000, : 991 - 998
  • [5] Modelling brittle failure of rock
    Hajiabdolmajid, V
    Kaiser, PK
    Martin, CD
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ROCK MECHANICS AND MINING SCIENCES, 2002, 39 (06) : 731 - 741
  • [7] THE MECHANISM OF FAILURE STRENGTH OF BRITTLE ROCK UNDER THE GENERAL TRIAXIAL STRESS STATES
    JIANG, X
    HE, L
    XUEFU, X
    LING, W
    GAOZHI, Y
    CIVIL ENGINEERING FOR PRACTICING AND DESIGN ENGINEERS, 1986, 5 (05): : 391 - 407
  • [8] Earthquake and seepage effects on the mobilised shear strength of closely jointed rock
    Pender, MJ
    SLOPE STABILITY ENGINEERING, VOLS 1 & 2, 1999, : 367 - 371
  • [9] Experimental study on brittle rock failure
    Lu, Senpeng
    Chen, Weizhong
    Jia, Shanpo
    Tan, Xianjun
    Yanshilixue Yu Gongcheng Xuebao/Chinese Journal of Rock Mechanics and Engineering, 2009, 28 (SUPPL. 1): : 2772 - 2777
  • [10] An Extension Failure Criterion for Brittle Rock
    Lu, Aizhong
    Zhang, Ning
    Zeng, Guisen
    ADVANCES IN CIVIL ENGINEERING, 2020, 2020