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author:

Cao, Yangbing (Cao, Yangbing.) [1] (Scholars:曹洋兵) | Yan, Qiang (Yan, Qiang.) [2] | Zhang, Sui (Zhang, Sui.) [3] | Cai, Fuming (Cai, Fuming.) [4]

Indexed by:

Scopus SCIE

Abstract:

Shale is a common rock type that is associated with underground engineering projects, and several important factors, such as bedding structure, confining pressure, and the loading and unloading path, significantly influence the anisotropy of shale. Triaxial monotonic loading tests and triaxial incremental cyclic loading and unloading tests of shale under three kinds of confining pressures and five types of bedding inclination angles (theta) were thus performed to investigate the anisotropy of shale in terms of mechanical behavior, acoustic emission (AE), and energy evolution, and reveal the mechanism by which shale anisotropy is weakened. The results show that (1) the compressive strength and elastic modulus of shale decrease and then increase as the theta increases, and that both sigma 3 and incremental cyclic loading and unloading reduce the anisotropy in terms of the compressive strength and elastic modulus of shale, with the ratio of plastic strain to total strain reaching its maximum at a theta of 60 degrees during each loading and unloading cycle. (2) The failure modes of shale with theta of 0 degrees, 30 degrees, and 90 degrees under triaxial monotonic loading are similar to the counterparts under triaxial incremental cyclic loading and unloading, while the failure modes of shale with theta of 45 degrees and 60 degrees differ significantly under the two loading conditions, and interestingly, the degree to which the bedding plane participates in shale crack evolution under incremental cyclic loading and unloading is considerably lower than that under triaxial monotonic loading. (3) The cumulative AE count and AE b-value of shale first decrease and then increase as the theta increases, while the Felicity ratio decreases as the number of cycles increases. (4) As the theta increases, the total energy density U0 and the parameter m, which reflects the accumulation rate of elastic energy, first decrease and then increase, with both reaching a minimum at a theta of 60 degrees. (5) The mode by which cyclic loading and unloading leads to failure in shale with a theta of 60 degrees is similar to that at a theta of 0 degrees and is the main mechanism by which shale anisotropy weakening occurs as a result of cyclic loading and unloading. The results provide experimental support and a theoretical basis for safer and more efficient underground engineering projects that involve shale.

Keyword:

acoustic emission anisotropy energy evolution failure mode incremental cyclic loading and unloading shale

Community:

  • [ 1 ] [Cao, Yangbing]Fuzhou Univ, Zijin Sch Geol & Min, Fuzhou 350108, Peoples R China
  • [ 2 ] [Yan, Qiang]Fuzhou Univ, Zijin Sch Geol & Min, Fuzhou 350108, Peoples R China
  • [ 3 ] [Cai, Fuming]Fuzhou Univ, Zijin Sch Geol & Min, Fuzhou 350108, Peoples R China
  • [ 4 ] [Zhang, Sui]Minist Nat Resources, Engn Technol Innovat Ctr Mineral Resources Explora, Guiyang 550081, Peoples R China
  • [ 5 ] [Zhang, Sui]103 Geol Brigade Bur, Geol & Mineral Explorat & Dev Guizhou Prov, Tongren 554300, Peoples R China

Reprint 's Address:

  • [Zhang, Sui]Minist Nat Resources, Engn Technol Innovat Ctr Mineral Resources Explora, Guiyang 550081, Peoples R China;;[Zhang, Sui]103 Geol Brigade Bur, Geol & Mineral Explorat & Dev Guizhou Prov, Tongren 554300, Peoples R China

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Source :

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL

ISSN: 2076-3417

Year: 2024

Issue: 6

Volume: 14

2 . 5 0 0

JCR@2023

Cited Count:

WoS CC Cited Count: 1

SCOPUS Cited Count: 1

ESI Highly Cited Papers on the List: 0 Unfold All

WanFang Cited Count:

Chinese Cited Count:

30 Days PV: 0

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