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contributor authorZ. Zheng
contributor authorL. R. Myer
contributor authorJ. M. Kemeny
contributor authorR. Suarez
contributor authorR. T. Ewy
contributor authorN. G. W. Cook
date accessioned2017-05-08T23:37:15Z
date available2017-05-08T23:37:15Z
date copyrightAugust, 1992
date issued1992
identifier issn0003-6900
identifier otherAMREAD-25630#263_1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/109554
description abstractUnder differential compressive stress rocks exhibit nonlinear deformation that includes initial compaction, near-linear elastic behavior, and strain-hardening followed by strain-softening and dilation (or compaction in clastic rocks) and localization. This behavior derives largely from changes in the microstructure of the rocks. Much of it has been attributed to the growth of extensile microcracks. The stress-induced microstructural changes brought about by successively more complicated states of stress produced by uniaxial and triaxial compression of circular cylinders, axisymmetric stresses in hollow cylinders, and indentation by hemispheres in Indiana limestone and Berea sandstone have been preserved using Wood’s metal porosimetry. In this technique molten Wood’s metal at about 100°C is used as a pore fluid at a pressure of about 10 MPa, and the experiments are conducted using the concepts of effective stress. At the deformation state of interest, the temperature is lowered to solidify the metal, thereby preserving the microstructure as it exists under load and facilitating subsequent preparation of the specimen for microscopic study. Mode I microcrack growth is observed to occur by a variety of mechanisms such as bending, point loading and sliding cracks. The effects of this are analyzed using an elastic continuum within which Mode II displacement across microcracks and Mode I microcrack growth results from heterogeneous stress concentrations that produce local tensile stresses. While the continuum model replicates many of the observations, it fails to account for localization by en echelon arrays of extensile microcracks that precede macroscopic shear faulting. Using a “zero order” continuum approximation, the spatially stochastic distribution of grains in clastic rocks is shown to be important in the formation of the en echelon arrays of microcracks that form shear bands.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleExtensile Cracking in Porous Rock Under Differential Compressive Stress
typeJournal Paper
journal volume45
journal issue8
journal titleApplied Mechanics Reviews
identifier doi10.1115/1.3119758
journal fristpage263
journal lastpage280
identifier eissn0003-6900
keywordsFracture (Process)
keywordsCompressive stress
keywordsRocks
keywordsMicrocracks
keywordsStress
keywordsMetals
keywordsCompacting
keywordsShear (Mechanics)
keywordsDeformation
keywordsTemperature
keywordsFluids
keywordsPressure
keywordsElasticity
keywordsFracture (Materials)
keywordsCylinders
keywordsDisplacement
keywordsApproximation
keywordsCircular cylinders
keywordsCompression
keywordsTension
keywordsWork hardening AND Mechanisms
treeApplied Mechanics Reviews:;1992:;volume( 045 ):;issue: 008
contenttypeFulltext


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