4.5 Article

A Micromechanics-Based Model of Direct Tensile Fracture in Brittle Rocks under Confining Pressure

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF GEOMECHANICS
Volume 23, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

ASCE-AMER SOC CIVIL ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1061/IJGNAI.GMENG-7939

Keywords

Micromechanics; Brittle rocks; Confined tensile fracture; Crack friction; Tension and compression transformation

Ask authors/readers for more resources

A novel micromechanics-based model for brittle rocks undergoing confined tensile fracture is proposed, based on the stress intensity factor of crack under different loading modes in fracture mechanics theory. The model considers both frictional and non-frictional confined tensile fracture mechanisms and investigates the transition process from the latter to the former. The stress-strain relationship during the confined tensile fracture, involving the unloading of axial stress in a compressive state and the loading of axial stress in a tensile state, is also studied. The model's validity is demonstrated through comparison with experimental data, and the effects of friction, density, inclination angle and size of the initial crack, and confining pressure on various mechanical properties of confined tensile fracture are discussed.
A novel micromechanics-based model in brittle rocks is presented during the confined tensile fracture. This model is formulated by using the stress intensity factor of crack under distinct loading modes in the fracture mechanics theory. The confined tensile fracture mechanisms with and without initial crack friction are established. The development process from the confined tensile fracture without initial crack friction to that with initial crack friction is studied. The stress-strain constitutive relationship describing the transformation mechanism from the unloading of axial stress at a compressive state to the loading of axial stress at a tensile state is also studied during the confined tensile fracture. The tension-compression transformation mechanism codetermined by the friction of the initial crack, the angle of initial crack inclination, and the confining pressure is proven. With the decrease of the angle of initial crack inclination or the increase of the confining pressure, the confined tensile fracture constitutive model tends to be dominated by the tensile fracture mechanism with initial crack friction. The confined tensile fracture of brittle rocks tends to happen at the larger angle of initial crack inclination. The reasonableness of the presented model is checked by contrasting the experimental data. Effects of the friction, density, inclination angle and size of the initial crack, and the confining pressure on the tensile relation curve of strain and stress, the tensile relation curve of crack length and stress, the tensile elastic modulus, the tensile stress of crack initiation, and the tensile strength are discussed.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available