4.7 Article

Thermoplastic cohesive fracturing model of thermally-treated granite

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijrmms.2021.104974

Keywords

Fracturing model; Thermoplastic; Cohesive crack; High temperature; Thermally-treated; Granite

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52004265]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20200629]
  3. Postdoctoral Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [2020Z211]

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This study proposed a thermoplastic cohesive fracturing model for thermally-treated granite, incorporating temperature-dependent softening rule and completely coupled stress-strain-temperature constitutive relation. The model was validated with experimental data, showing significant temperature-dependent properties in granite fracturing mechanisms. The findings contribute to a better understanding of the fracturing behavior of granite under temperature-dependent conditions.
Thermoplastic fracturing is a prominent characteristic of thermally-treated granite for temperature-dependent underground geotechnical engineerings, such as geothermal energy exploration and high-level nuclear waste disposal. More specifically, the tension-open of the cohesive crack in the fracture process zone (FPZ) presents a plastic softening feature dependent on temperature. However, understanding granite thermoplastic fracturing remains challenging. This work proposes a thermoplastic cohesive fracturing model of thermally-treated granite, incorporating temperature-dependent softening rule and completely coupled stress-strain-temperature constitutive relation. Several new thermoplastic fracturing properties in the proposed model are determined by further analyses of published fracturing test data (Miao et al., 2020) done on Beishan granite suffering high-temperature treatments (200-500 degrees C). The initial yield parameter (cohesive tensile strength) decreases linearly with the rising high-temperature treatments. The critical yield parameter (the critical crack opening displacement (COD)) follows a two-stage linear increasing rule with 300 degrees C as a boundary, similar to the temperature-dependent FPZ length. The plastic modulus, delineating the cohesive crack's softening rule, increases quadratically with the enhanced high-temperature treatment. The temperature sensitivity modulus (T), characterizing the contraction/expansion of yield surface with increasing temperatures, decreases from positive to negative with the increasing COD. Both the fracture energy and the accumulated dissipated energy present remarkable nonlinearities with several inflection points, implying the complex temperature-dependent fracture resistance. This proposed model was validated with three-point-bending fracturing tests of thermally-treated Beishan granite, fitting well (coefficient: 88.8%-99.7%) with the experimental cohesive tensile strength, critical COD, and the accumulated dissipated energy. Besides, by analyzing the softening curves of cohesive cracks in thermally-treated granite, the positive-negative change of T was consistent with the contraction-expansion transition of the yield surface. This work provides a modeling approach for temperature-dependent fracturing of rock-like materials.

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