4 results on '"failure phenomena"'
Search Results
2. Excavation response and reinforcement practice of large underground caverns within high-stress hard rock masses: The case of Shuangjiangkou hydropower Station, China.
- Author
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Liu, Xiu-Yang, Xu, Ding-Ping, Jiang, Quan, and Ma, Xing-Dong
- Subjects
- *
ROCK music , *CAVES , *WATER power , *UNDERGROUND construction , *FIELD research - Abstract
The construction of large-scale underground caverns poses numerous challenges due to their massive scale and high complexity. Among them, stability has always been a major concern during the construction process of large underground caverns within high-stress hard rock masses. It is not only influenced by the geological background of the project but also by the engineering activities during construction. This study takes the construction of the Shuangjiangkou (SJK) hydropower station as a case study and combines field investigations to summarize engineering issues and solutions under high geostress in three aspects. Firstly, it focuses on estimating and modifying the in-situ stress field of the underground caverns in the deep-cut valley area using limited geostress testing data and the observed failure phenomena in the pilot tunnel. Secondly, it discusses the typical failure phenomena of caverns under high geostress, including global stress-induced failures and local vein-controlled failures, as well as the corresponding failure mechanisms and treatment measures. Finally, it addresses the special failure phenomena occurring in the protective layer of the rock-anchored beam and optimizes the excavation scheme based on the observed failure patterns. The research results and solutions provided in this study, based on the case of the SJK hydropower station, are expected to serve as a reference for subsequent construction of large underground caverns within high-stress hard rock masses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Analysis of failure mechanism of bitumen films
- Author
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Poulikakos, L.D., Tiwari, M.K., and Partl, M.N.
- Subjects
- *
BITUMEN , *THIN films , *VISCOELASTICITY , *SEPARATION (Technology) , *BINDING agents , *NUCLEATION - Abstract
Abstract: The failure phenomena of a viscoelastic thin film of bitumen and polymer modified bitumen under direct tension tests is investigated in detail, experimentally and theoretically. Using video recording and image processing techniques, the time evolution of failure and film disintegration and separation phenomena were studied. The following failure stages were identified and recorded: Initial (=stage 1), necking (=stage 2), filamentation with void nucleation (=stage 3) and separation (=stage 4). The technique allowed the identification of an additional failure stage for the pure bitumen than the four identified for binders, namely light transparent thinning before void nucleation. The determination of stages to final separation allowed behavioral distinction between the straight run bitumen and the polymer modified bitumen. As the direct tensile tests proceed, in addition to shear forces demonstrative of viscous effects, gravity and capillary forces act on the binder film. In order to understand the relative effect of these forces the order of magnitude of relevant dimensionless numbers, representing ratios of these forces is considered and discussed. The analysis of the above numbers confirms that the flow in bitumen is dominated by viscous effects although capillary forces do play a role at later stages of the experiment with negligible inertia and gravitational effects. The detailed analysis of micromechanical behavior of straight run bitumen and polymer modified bitumen provided further indication corroborating the superior field performance of polymer modified bitumen in porous asphalt. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Stress redistribution around clusters of broken fibres in a composite
- Author
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Luc St-Pierre, Ned J. Martorell, Silvestre T. Pinho, Engineering & Physical Science Research Council (EPSRC), Solid Mechanics, Imperial College London, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Aalto-yliopisto, and Aalto University
- Subjects
Technology ,Materials science ,Monte Carlo method ,Composite number ,Materials Science ,02 engineering and technology ,MODEL COMPOSITES ,Carbon fibres ,UNIDIRECTIONAL CFRP COMPOSITES ,09 Engineering ,Monte Carlo simulations ,FAILURE PHENOMENA ,Mathematics::Algebraic Geometry ,0203 mechanical engineering ,Ultimate tensile strength ,Cluster (physics) ,Fiber bundle ,LOAD-TRANSFER ,COMPUTED-TOMOGRAPHY ,Composite material ,TENSILE-STRENGTH ,ta216 ,Materials ,Civil and Structural Engineering ,Stress concentration ,Stress concentrations ,ta214 ,Science & Technology ,Finite element analysis (FEA) ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Finite element method ,Stress field ,020303 mechanical engineering & transports ,Materials Science, Composites ,MICROMECHANISMS ,Ceramics and Composites ,SHEAR-LAG ,REINFORCED EPOXY COMPOSITE ,0210 nano-technology ,FINITE-ELEMENT - Abstract
A key aspect of the longitudinal tensile failure of composites is the stress redistribution that occurs around broken fibres. Work on this topic has focussed mainly on the stress field surrounding a single broken fibre; however, this is an important limitation as unstable failure in carbon fibre bundles occurs when a cluster of about 16 or more broken fibres is formed. Therefore, we have developed a detailed Finite Element (FE) model to investigate how stress redistribution varies with the number of broken fibres in a cluster. The results show that both the recovery length and stress concentration factor increase significantly with increasing number of broken fibres in a cluster. We have also developed an analytical model, suitable to be included in existing or new fibre bundle models, that captures how the recovery length and stress concentration factor vary with the broken cluster size, and validated its predictions against our FE simulations. Finally, we extended our FE model to predict the survival probability of fibre bundles using Monte Carlo simulations, and found that these predictions were in good agreement with experimental and analytical results on microcomposites.
- Published
- 2017
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