4.6 Article

Dynamic Compressive and Tensile Characterisation of Igneous Rocks Using Split-Hopkinson Pressure Bar and Digital Image Correlation

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 15, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma15228264

Keywords

rock; dynamic mechanical properties; fracture; high-speed imaging; digital image correlation; Split-Hopkinson pressure bar

Funding

  1. European Union [792210]
  2. H2020 Societal Challenges Programme [792210] Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme

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This paper presents a detailed study on the dynamic mechanical characterization of two rock materials (Kuru grey granite and Kuru black diorite) using a Split-Hopkinson Pressure Bar and high-speed imaging. The study provides information about the fracture initiation and propagation, as well as the indirect tensile strain and strain rates on the surface of the materials. The results show that a proper selection of the sensing region and high temporal resolution can reliably estimate crack formation and subsequent propagation.
The dynamic fracture process of rock materials is of importance for several industrial applications, such as drilling for geothermal installation. Numerical simulation can aid in increasing the understanding about rock fracture; however, it requires precise knowledge about the dynamical mechanical properties alongside information about the initiation and propagation of cracks in the material. This work covers the detailed dynamic mechanical characterisation of two rock materials-Kuru grey granite and Kuru black diorite-using a Split-Hopkinson Pressure Bar complemented with high-speed imaging. The rock materials were characterised using the Brazilian disc and uniaxial compression tests. From the high-speed images, the instant of fracture initiation was estimated for both tests, and a Digital Image Correlation analysis was conducted for the Brazilian disc test. The nearly constant tensile strain in the centre was obtained by selecting a rectangular sensing region, sufficiently large to avoid complicated local strain distributions appearing between grains and at voids. With a significantly high camera frame rate of 671,000 fps, the indirect tensile strain and strain rates on the surface of the disc could be evaluated. Furthermore, the overloading effect in the Brazilian disc test is evaluated using a novel methodology consisting of high-speed images and Digital Image Correlation analysis. From this, the overloading effects were found to be 30 and 23%. The high-speed images of the compression tests indicated fracture initiation at 93 to 95% of the peak dynamic strength for granite and diorite, respectively. However, fracture initiation most likely occurred before this in a non-observed part of the sample. It is concluded that the indirect tensile strain obtained by selecting a proper size of the sensing region combined with the high temporal resolution result in a reliable estimate of crack formation and subsequent propagation.

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