Bin Wang , Yujing Jiang , Qiangyong Zhang , Hongbin Chen
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Studying the mechanical response of en-echelon joints under cyclic shear loading conditions can provide novel insights into the instability of jointed rock masses under seismic conditions. To investigate the effects of joint persistence, normal stress, cyclic distance, and shear velocity on the cyclic shear behavior of en-echelon joints, a series of cyclic shear tests in the laboratory was performed. Findings revealed that the failure morphography of en-echelon joints manifested through brecciated shear zones and abraded rupture surfaces, resulting in notable reductions in shear strength and significant compressibility. The degradation factor of shear strength ranged from 0.363 to 0.708 after ten cycles. The shear strength degradation factor showed an inverse relationship with joint persistence and normal stress while exhibiting a direct correlation with cyclic distance over ten cycles. En-echelon joints characterized by moderate joint persistence, high normal stress, small cyclic distance, and low shear velocity demonstrated increased cyclic friction strength. Moreover, normal stress and joint persistence exerted a more significant influence on shear strength compared to cyclic distance and shear velocity. For en-echelon joints, shear stiffness increased during small shear displacements with cycle number while decreased during large shear displacements; shear stiffness was inversely proportional to cyclic distance and joint persistence, and directly proportional to normal stress. Compressibility of en-echelon joints correlated directly with joint persistence, normal stress, cyclic distance, and shear velocity. Compared to normal stress and cyclic distance, joint persistence and shear velocity exhibited less influence on compressibility.
期刊介绍:
Theoretical and Applied Fracture Mechanics'' aims & scopes have been re-designed to cover both the theoretical, applied, and numerical aspects associated with those cracking related phenomena taking place, at a micro-, meso-, and macroscopic level, in materials/components/structures of any kind.
The journal aims to cover the cracking/mechanical behaviour of materials/components/structures in those situations involving both time-independent and time-dependent system of external forces/moments (such as, for instance, quasi-static, impulsive, impact, blasting, creep, contact, and fatigue loading). Since, under the above circumstances, the mechanical behaviour of cracked materials/components/structures is also affected by the environmental conditions, the journal would consider also those theoretical/experimental research works investigating the effect of external variables such as, for instance, the effect of corrosive environments as well as of high/low-temperature.