4.7 Article

Micromechanics of Fracture Propagation During Multistage Stress Relaxation and Creep in Brittle Rocks

Journal

ROCK MECHANICS AND ROCK ENGINEERING
Volume 55, Issue 12, Pages 7611-7627

Publisher

SPRINGER WIEN
DOI: 10.1007/s00603-022-03045-w

Keywords

Brittle rocks; Barre granite; Time-dependent failure; Multistage stress relaxation; Multistage creep; Crack mechanisms; Tensile and shear cracks

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-SC0019117]
  2. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) [DE-SC0019117] Funding Source: U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)

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Time-dependent rock deformation leads to the weakening of rock mass. Understanding the fracturing mechanisms involved in the time-dependent behavior in brittle rocks is important. In this study, a series of experiments were conducted to analyze the spatial and temporal evolution of cracking mechanisms using AE and 2D-DIC techniques.
Time-dependent rock deformation caused by the initiation and growth of fractures leads to the weakening of the rock mass. Understanding the fracturing mechanisms involved in the time-dependent behavior in brittle rocks is very important and to achieve this goal, a systematic series of three types of experiments was performed on double-flawed prismatic Barre granite specimens under unconfined compression. The first series aimed to identify the failure mechanism in the short-term failure mode under monotonic loading, the, second series involved multistage relaxation (constant strain) experiments to analyze the damage at different strain levels, and the third series explored the fracture propagation under multistage creep (constant load) experiments. The spatial and temporal evolution of cracking mechanisms were evaluated using the acoustic emission (AE) and two-dimensional digital image correlation (2D-DIC) techniques to observe the whole crack growth process as well as the accumulated inelastic strain at the specified region of interest. Results suggest that in the case of multistage creep experiments, the time to failure was less compared to the multistage relaxation, when loaded above the crack damage threshold (CD) estimated from the monotonic testing. The frequency magnitude distribution of the AE events generated in the three loading conditions followed the Gutenberg Richter model. A relatively lower b-value was obtained for the creep experiments, indicative of high energy AE events and faster crack growth. In addition, the AE and DIC results also revealed high evolution of tensile cracks at-different stages of creep and relaxation compared to shear and mixed-mode cracks.

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