4.7 Article

Breakage and shear behaviour of intermittent rock joints

Journal

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S1365-1609(03)00060-1

Keywords

discontinuous rock joints; material bridges; en-echelon arrangements; shear strength; successive failure; direct shear tests; phase of shearing; models of shear mechanisms; indirect tensile strength; rolling friction; brecciated shear zone

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The breakage and shear behaviour of intermittent rock joints have been investigated in a series of direct shear tests with a new shear device, specifically designed for this purpose. The tests have been performed on specimens of rock-like material or hard rock, respectively, incorporating idealized non-persistent joints, made up of a number of short cracks in an en-echelon arrangement along the central shear axis. The shear behaviour of such a joint constellation has been found to be composed of different phases. The first phase of shearing is that of the actual rupture, initiated by the formation of wing cracks, starting from the existing cracks and growing into the material bridges, and concluded by the generation of additional new fractures connecting the initial cracks in the zone between the wing cracks. The second phase of shearing is characterized by friction processes and volume increase in the then continuous shear zone. Finally, the third phase of shearing, reached after large shear displacements, is determined by sliding processes inside the strongly fractured shear zone. In a large number of shear tests the geometrical parameters of the discontinuous joints as well as the loading conditions have been found to influence the activated shear resistance in each phase of shearing to a noticeably different extent. The orientation of the initial cracks and the normal stress, however, have been identified as the most influential parameters. Depending on the test conditions, an initially discontinuous rock joint can activate the largest shear resistance not just before rupture but in one of the two subsequent phases of shearing as well. The mechanisms which govern the different shear phases could be identified as (1) tensile rupturing, (2) rolling and sliding friction of dilatant joint zones and (3) sliding within the joint filling composed of brecciated material. (C) 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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