CONCEPTS AND IMPACTS OF ROCK STIFFNESS

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Mechanical Properties of Metals
Advertisements

Failure criteria for laminated composites
Mechanics. CE 336 Loadings 3 Basic Types of Loadings Static Dynamic Environmental.
Stress and Deformation: Part II (D&R, ; ) 1. Anderson's Theory of Faulting 2. Rheology (mechanical behavior of rocks) - Elastic: Hooke's.
Bell Work 12/5/14 1. How do you get a spaghetti noodle to bend and not break? 2. How do you break a spaghetti noodle? 3. How can you apply this concept.
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES
Forging new generations of engineers. The following MATERIAL PROPERTIES can be evaluated / determined by TENSILE TESTING: STRENGTH DUCTILITY ELASTICITY.
Chapter 11 Mechanical Properties of Materials
Normal Strain and Stress
Structural Geology Ch. 5 – Rheology
Chapter 3 Mechanical Properties of Materials
Materials Engineering – Day 2
Sensitivities in rock mass properties A DEM insight Cédric Lambert (*) & John Read (**) (*) University of Canterbury, New Zealand (**) CSIRO - Earth Science.
STRESS and STRAIN ASPECTS OF ROCK Part 2. Unlike soils, pure rock (solid material between joints) is an elasto-plastic material, subject to elastic recovery.
Failure Theories Why do parts fail? What kind of stresses?
EXPERIMENT # 3 Instructor: M.Yaqub
Mechanics of Materials II
Joints and Shear Fractures
Tensile Test The most common static test is the uniaxial tensile test, which provides information about a variety of properties. As a load is applied to.
Lecture 26: Mechanical Properties I: Metals & Ceramics
Mechanics of Materials II
ENGR 225 Section
Part 3 STRAIN INCOMPATABILITY. The most important aspect of applied rock mechanics is appreciating the strain incompatibility between rocks of dissimilar.
LECTURER 3 Fundamental Mechanical Properties (i)Tensile strength
Principal Stresses and Strain and Theories of Failure
CHAPTER OBJECTIVES Show relationship of stress and strain using experimental methods to determine stress-strain diagram of a specific material Discuss.
Objectives Students will be able to label a stress-strain diagram correctly indicating. Ultimate stress, yield stress and proportional limit. Students.
FYI: All three types of stress are measured in newtons / meter2 but all have different effects on solids. Materials Solids are often placed under stress.
Class #1.2 Civil Engineering Materials – CIVE 2110
STRENGTH OF MATERIALS John Parkinson ©.
Unit V Lecturer11 LECTURE-I  Introduction  Some important definitions  Stress-strain relation for different engineering materials.
Schedule Problem Set #3- on line, due Monday Oct.25 Updated Syllabus (with new PS due date) MidTerm #1, Thursday, Oct. 20 study guide online this week.
Mechanicial Properties of Materials
Mechanical Properties of Materials
Welding Design 1998/MJ1/MatJoin2/1 Design. Lesson Objectives When you finish this lesson you will understand: Mechanical and Physical Properties (structure.
Mechanical Properties Considerations for Fast Core Propellants
Chapter 9-Statics, Dynamics and Mechanical Engineering Objectives and what should you Know: What are statics and Dynamics? What are the Newtons’s three.
Hardness testing - localized deformation Brinell Vickers Knoop Rockwell Hardness/tensile strength correlation Impact testing - energy absorbed upon fracture.
Course No.: MEBF ZC342 MACHINE DESIGN
Unit 1 Key Facts- Materials Hooke’s Law Force extension graph Elastic energy Young’s Modulus Properties of materials.
The Ground Response Curve, Pillar Loading and Pillar Failure G.S. (Essie) Esterhuizen Chris Mark Michael Murphy The findings and conclusions in this presentation.
Testing Methods for Composites
KIN 330 Structural and Functional Analysis of Human Movement.
EGM 5653 Advanced Mechanics of Materials
Engineering properties of rock Prepared by :- Kumari Pooja 3 rd sem civil department 13oo
Physical properties Enrollment numbers Government engineering collage,Palanpur sub:- Applied.
Materials Science Chapter 8 Deformation and Fracture.
Virtual Class Presentation
Failure and Failure Theories:
CHAPTER OBJECTIVES Show relationship of stress and strain using experimental methods to determine stress-strain diagram of a specific material Discuss.
Nanoindentation.
The concept of stress, strain, elastic modulus, plastic modulus, tensile strength and energy as demonstrated by a tensile stress applied to a given structure.
Chapter 3 – Mechanical Properties of Material
Introduction We select materials for many components and applications by matching the properties of the material to the service condition required of the.
LECTURER 3 Fundamental Mechanical Properties (i)Tensile strength
Mechanical Properties of Metals
DEPARTMENT OF MECHANICAL AND MANUFACTURING ENGINEERING
Forging new generations of engineers
young’s modulus 10:00 Particle Physics :30 3 Experiments 12:00
( BDA 3033 ) CHAPTER 6 Theories of Elastic Failures
Tensile Testing The following MATERIAL PROPERTIES can be evaluated / determined by TENSILE TESTING: STRENGTH DUCTILITY ELASTICITY STIFFNESS.
Mechanical Properties of Metals
Material Testing.
( BDA 3033 ) CHAPTER 6 Theories of Elastic Failures
LECTURE-I Introduction Some important definitions
Mechanical Properties of Metals
Mechanical Properties of Virtual Block-in-matrix Colluvium
Applied Technology High School (ATHS)
Describing deformation
CHAPTER OBJECTIVES Show relationship of stress and strain using experimental methods to determine stress-strain diagram of a specific material Discuss.
Presentation transcript:

CONCEPTS AND IMPACTS OF ROCK STIFFNESS Part 5 CONCEPTS AND IMPACTS OF ROCK STIFFNESS Tunnel Gallery 3 failure Zion-Mt Carmel Tunnel in April 1958

Rock Stiffness Controls Fracture Spacing Rock stiffness, more than any other factor, appears to control spacings between secondary fractures, such as these stress relief joints around adits in the Gerstley Mine, Death Valley

The area beneath the stress vs strain curve is a measure of the stored elastic strain energy of te rock specimen.

The compressive strength exhibited by a specimen of layered rock varies with the inclination of the rock fabric, as shown in these data. This variance is termed “anisotropy.”

Full-range stress strain plots record behavior in the post-failure envelope. The testing machine must be significantly stiffer than the specimen in order to carry out such tests, because elastic strain energy is stored in the machine frame.

The shape of the post-failure envelope depends on rock stiffness, testing machine vs rock specimen stiffness ratio, and scale of the specimen being tested. This is an extremely brittle material, the Nutall Quartzite.

Class II brittle behavior is often exhibited by brittle rocks, or cores of varying size and length-to-wide ratios

Testing machine stiffness is a function of elastic distortion during loading. It can be evaluated by advancing opposing rams without the rock specimen, as sketched here.