• Title/Summary/Keyword: Brittle Rock

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A Boundary Element Analysis for Damage and Failure Process of Brittle Rock using ERACOD (FRACOD를 이용한 취성 암석의 손상 및 파괴에 대한 경계요소 해석)

  • ;Baotang Shen;Ove Stephansson
    • Tunnel and Underground Space
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    • v.14 no.4
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    • pp.248-260
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    • 2004
  • Damage in brittle rock due to stress increase starts from initiation of microcracks, and then results in failure by forming macro failure planes due to propagation and coalescence of these discrete cracks. Conventionally, continuum approaches using macro-failure criteria or a number of elasto-plastic models have been major solution to implement rock damage and failure. However, actual brittle failure processes can be better described in phenomenological approach if initiation and propagation of discrete fractures are explicitly considered. This study presents damage and failure process of rock using a boundary element code, FRACOD, which has been developed to model fracturing process of rocks. Through a series of numerical uniaxial compressive tests, the feasibility of the developed model was verified, and realistic rock failure process was reproduced considering scale effects in rocks. In addition, the fracturing process and the corresponding rock damage in the vicinity of deep shaft in rock mass were presented as an application of this approach. This approach will be expected to contribute to finding better engineering solutions for the analysis of stability problems in brittle rock masses.

Stability evaluation and microseismic monitoring around Large Underground Oil Storage Cavern in Over-stressed Rock Mass (과지압 암반 내 대규모 지하 유류비축기지 안정성 평가 및 Microseismic 계측)

  • Lee Hee-Suk;Lee Dae-Hyuck;Kim Ho-Yeong;Hong Jee-Soo;Choi Young-Tae;Kim Seok-Jin;Park Yeon-Jun
    • 한국터널공학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2005.04a
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    • pp.189-201
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    • 2005
  • Brittle failure has been detected in over-stressed rock mass during the construction of oil storage cavern. The main characteristics of stress induced brittle failure of the site are introduced. Various evaluation and measures are sought to stabilize the over-stressed rock mass. The major results from numerical analysis of the cavern are presented, and from current microseismic monitoring to detect hazard from brittle failure are presented.

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Study of Brittle Failure (취성파괴에 관한 고찰)

  • Cheon, Dae-Sung;Synn, Joong-Ho;Jeon, Seo-Kwon;Park, Chan
    • Tunnel and Underground Space
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    • v.16 no.6 s.65
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    • pp.437-450
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    • 2006
  • Failure around an underground opening is a function of in-situ stress magnitudes, intact rock strength and the distribution of fractures in the rock mass. At high in-situ stress, the failure process is affected and eventually dominated by stress-induced fractures preferentially growing parallel to the excavation boundary. This fracturing is often observed in brittle type of failure such as slabbing or spatting. Recent studies dies on the stress-induced damage of rock revealed its importance especially in a highly stressed regime. As the constructions of underground structures at deep depths increased, the cases of the brittle failure also increased and furthermore spalling was occurred in Korea at low depths. To improve the stability of the underground structures at highly stressed regime, the characteristics of brittle failure should be examined, but they have not yet been properly investigated. Therefore in this report the characteristics of brittle failure such as types, failure mechanism and modeling methods etc. were considered in all aspects, based on the previous researches.

Numerical modeling of brittle failure of the overstressed rock mass around deep tunnel (심부 터널 주변 과응력 암반의 취성파괴 수치모델링)

  • Lee, Kun-Chai;Moon, Hyun-Koo
    • Journal of Korean Tunnelling and Underground Space Association
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    • v.18 no.5
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    • pp.469-485
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    • 2016
  • The failure of rock mass around deep tunnel, different from shallow tunnel largely affected by discontinuities, is dominated by magnitudes and directions of stresses, and the failures dominated by stresses can be divided into ductile and brittle features according to the conditions of stresses and the characteristics of rock mass. It is important to know the range and the depth of the V-shaped notch type failure resulted from the brittle failure, such as spalling, slabbing and rock burst, because they are the main factors for the design of excavation and support of deep tunnels. The main features of brittle failure are that it consists of cohesion loss and friction mobilization according to the stress condition, and is progressive. In this paper, a three-dimensional numerical model has been developed in order to simulate the brittle behavior of rock mass around deep tunnel by introducing the bi-linear failure envelope cut off, elastic-elastoplastic coupling and gradual spread of elastoplastic regions. By performing a series of numerical analyses, it is shown that the depths of failure estimated by this model coincide with an empirical relation from a case study.

Ground Investigation and Characterization for Deep Tunnel Design (대심도 암반의 터널 설계를 위한 지반 조사와 특성화)

  • Yoon, Woon-Sang;Choi, Jae-Won;Park, Jeong-Hoon;Song, Kook-Hwan;Kim, Young-Keun
    • Proceedings of the Korean Geotechical Society Conference
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    • 2009.09a
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    • pp.584-590
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    • 2009
  • One of the critical design problems involved in deep tunnelling in brittle rock, is the creation of surface spalling damage and breakouts. If weak fault zone is developed in deep tunnel, squeezing problem is added to the problems. According to the results of ground investigation in the study area, hard granitic rockmass and distinguished high angle fault zone are distributed on the tunnel level over 400m depth. To analyse the probability of brittle failure and squeezing, ground characterization with special lab. and field test were carried out. By the results, probability of brittle failures like spalling and rock burst is very low. But squeezing may be probable, if weak fault zone observed surface and drill core is extended to designed tunnel level.

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A Numerical Study on the Progressive Brittle Failure of Rock Mass Due to Overstress (과지압으로 인한 암반의 점진적 취성파괴 과정의 수치해석적 연구)

  • Choi Young-Tae;Lee Dae-Hyuck;Lee Hee-Suk;Kim Jin-A;Lee Du-Hwa;You Kwang-Ho;Park Yeon-Jun
    • Tunnel and Underground Space
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    • v.16 no.3 s.62
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    • pp.259-276
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    • 2006
  • In rock mass subject to high in-situ stresses, the failure process of rock is dominated by the stress-induced fractures growing parallel to the excavation boundary. When the ratio of in situ stresses compared to rock strength is greater than a certain value, progressive brittle failure which is characterized by popping and spatting of rock debris occurs due to stress concentration. Traditional constitutive model like Mohr-Coulomb usually assume that the normal stress dependent frictional strength component and the cohesion strength component are constant, therefore modelling progressive brittle failure will be very difficult. In this study, a series of numerical analyses were conducted for surrounding rock mass near crude oil storage cavern using CW-FS model which was known to be efficient for modelling brittle failure and the results were compared with those of linear Mohr-Coulomb model. Further analyses were performed by varying plastic shear strain limits on cohesion and internal friction angle to find the proper values which yield the matching result with the observed failure in the oil storage caverns. The obtained results showed that CW-FS model could be a proper method to characterize essential behavior of progressive brittle failure in competent rock mass.

A Closed-Form Solution for Circular Openings in an Elastic-Brittle-Plastic Extended Spatial Mobilized Plane Medium

  • Wu, Chuangzhou;Guo, Wei;Jang, Bo-An
    • The Journal of Engineering Geology
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    • v.32 no.1
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    • pp.1-12
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    • 2022
  • Based on the extended spatial mobilization plane (SMP) criterion, we present an elastic-brittle-plastic solution for an axisymmetric cylindrical tunnel. The influences of the intermediate principal compressive stress and material strain-softening behavior are considered. Closed-form formulas for the critical support force, radius of plastic zone, and distributions of stress and displacement in surrounding rock are proposed. The elastic-plastic solution based on SMP is compared with the Kastner solution to verify the credibility of the obtained elastic-plastic solution. The elastic-brittle-plastic solution following the SMP criterion and the current solution based on the Mohr-Coulomb criterion are also compared. The rock strain-softening rate and the intermediate principal stress affect the stability of the surrounding rock. The results provide guidance for optimizing the design of support systems for tunnels.

Rock Mechanics Advances for Underground Construction in Civil Engineering and Mining

  • Kaiser, Peter K.;Kim, Bo-Hyun
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society for Rock Mechanics Conference
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    • 2008.10a
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    • pp.3-16
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    • 2008
  • The underground construction and mining are facing many geomechanics challenges stemming from, geological complexities and stress-driven rock mass degradation processes. Brittle failing rock at depth poses unique problems as stress-driven failure processes often dominate the tunnel behaviour. Such failure processes can lead to shallow unravelling or strainbursting modes of instability that cause difficult conditions for tunnel contractors. This keynote address focuses on the challenge of anticipating the actual behaviour of brittle rocks in laboratory testing, for empirical rock mass strength estimation, and by back-analysis of field observations. This paper summarizes lessons learned during the construction of deep Alpine tunnels and highlights implications that are of practical importance with respect to constructability. It builds on a recent presentation made at the $1^{st}$ Southern Hemisphere International Rock Mechanics Symposium held in Perth, Australia, in September this year, and includes results from recent developments.

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Characterization of the brittleness of hard rock at different temperatures using uniaxial compression tests

  • Chen, Guoqing;Li, Tianbin;Wang, Wei;Guo, Fan;Yin, Hongyu
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
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    • v.13 no.1
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    • pp.63-77
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    • 2017
  • The failure mechanism of a deep hard rock tunnel under high geostress and high geothermalactivity is extremely complex. Uniaxial compression tests of granite at different temperatures were conducted. The complete stress-strain curves, mechanical parameters and macroscopic failure types of the rock were analyzed in detail. The brittleness index, which represents the possibility of a severe brittleness hazard, is proposed in this paperby comparing the peak stress and the expansion stress. The results show that the temperature range from 20 to $60^{\circ}C$ is able to aggravate the brittle failure of hard rock based on the brittleness index. The closure of internal micro cracks by thermal stress can improve the strength of hard rock and the storage capacity of elastic strain energy. The failure mode ofthe samples changes from shear failure to tensile failure as the temperature increases. In conclusion, the brittle failure mechanism of hard rock under the action of thermal coupling is revealed, and the analysis result offers significant guidance for deep buried tunnels at high temperatures and under high geostress.

A plastic strain based statistical damage model for brittle to ductile behaviour of rocks

  • Zhou, Changtai;Zhang, Kai;Wang, Haibo;Xu, Yongxiang
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
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    • v.21 no.4
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    • pp.349-356
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    • 2020
  • Rock brittleness, which is closely related to the failure modes, plays a significant role in the design and construction of many rock engineering applications. However, the brittle-ductile failure transition is mostly ignored by the current statistical damage constitutive model, which may misestimate the failure strength and failure behaviours of intact rock. In this study, a new statistical damage model considering rock brittleness is proposed for brittle to ductile behaviour of rocks using brittleness index (BI). Firstly, the statistical constitutive damage model is reviewed and a new statistical damage model considering failure mode transition is developed by introducing rock brittleness parameter-BI. Then the corresponding damage distribution parameters, shape parameter m and scale parameter F0, are expressed in terms of BI. The shape parameter m has a positive relationship with BI while the scale parameter F0 depends on both BI and εe. Finally, the robustness and correctness of the proposed damage model is validated using a set of experimental data with various confining pressure.