4.7 Article

The evolution of rock failure with discontinuities due to shear creep

Journal

ACTA GEOTECHNICA
Volume 8, Issue 6, Pages 567-581

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11440-013-0244-5

Keywords

Damage; Numerical simulation; Rock discontinuity; Shear creep; Time-dependent behavior

Funding

  1. NSFC [41172265]
  2. 973 Program [2013CB227900]
  3. State Key Laboratory of Geo-hazard Prevention and Geo-environment Protection, Chengdu University of Technology [SKLGP2012K008]
  4. Scientific Research Foundation for Returned Scholars, Ministry of Education of China

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A two-dimensional brittle creep model for rock provides insight into the initiation of shear fracture along weak discontinuities in rock. The model accounts for material heterogeneity and introduces the concept of a mesoscopic renormalization to capture the cooperative interaction between cracks in the transition from distributed to localized damage. A series of shear creep tests on rock with discontinuities were performed to simulate the initiation and propagation of crack along a pre-existing weakness under sustained shear stress and normal stress. The investigation showed that shear stress level and the normal stress level might have significant effect on the long-term behavior of rock with weak discontinuities. Moreover, a case study of rock slope instability was also investigated, where the numerically simulated instability failure of rock slope with discontinuities showed that both tensile and shear damage at the weakest elements are the trigger for the failure surface initiation in the rock slope. Once damage occurs, redistributed stress concentrations would then intensify fracture propagation and coalescence within these damage zones, leading to the progressive development of a failure surface. Moreover, failure surface extending is not only dominated by the properties and the position of discontinuities but also influenced remarkably by the complex interaction between existing discontinuities and fracture propagation. The results are of general interest because they can be applied to the investigation of time-dependent instability in rock masses, to the mitigation of associated rock hazards in rock engineering, and even to a better understanding of the physical phenomena governing the stability of rock slope.

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