Theory Of Aggregate Rock Behavior Based On Absolute Three-Dimensional Testing (ATT) Of Rock Salt

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 43
- File Size:
- 1103 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1972
Abstract
The present state of knowledge of three-dimensional rock properties does not provide an adequate basis for evaluating the safety of under- ground structures in situ. Most of the triaxial studies reported in the past have dealt with crushing strength, but have failed to consider the intergranular behavior and triaxial strain state of rocks. Without this information, the structural competence of rocks cannot be accurately assessed. The absolute three-dimensional testing method (ATT) was conceived for the purpose of analyzing the three-dimensional states of stresses and strains in aggregate rocks under conditions commonly encountered in underground structures. In-situ stress-strain states are not simple, even in the simplest possible form of opening, excavated in a homogeneous and isotropic rock medium. In general, there are four basic stress-strain states which are present in underground openings, regardless of the complexity of their geological conditions. They are the yielded, brittle-fractured, stress-relieved, stress-concentrated states, as illustrated in the schematic diagram, Fig. 1. The ATT machine was designed to create and study all these states in the laboratory. A theory describing the aggregate behavior of rocks under these diversified states is essential to evaluate the safety of underground structures. The Griffith theory is limited to tensile failure of ductile materials and therefore does not apply to behavior of aggregate rocks under compression. The Griffith theory also fails to consider the grain boundary characteristics of aggregates, which is the determining factor of rock behavior. The Mohr-Coulomb theory of failure ignores the importance of the intergranular behavior of rocks. An application of the continuum theory to
Citation
APA:
(1972) Theory Of Aggregate Rock Behavior Based On Absolute Three-Dimensional Testing (ATT) Of Rock SaltMLA: Theory Of Aggregate Rock Behavior Based On Absolute Three-Dimensional Testing (ATT) Of Rock Salt. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1972.