Abstract

The mechanical behavior of geomaterials under plane-strain biaxial stress state (PSBSS, a special case of biaxial stress state) is often considered in geotechnical structures such as highwall and longwall coal pillars. In this study, a modified statistical damage constitutive model based on Weibull distribution was established to explain the mechanical behavior of rocks under the PSBSS. The modified Wiebols-Cook criterion, Drucker-Prager criterion, and extremum method were adopted in this model to estimate the peak strength of rock, the strength level of microscopic element, and the statistical parameters of model, respectively. Besides, laboratory tests for brittle and ductile geomaterials under PSBSS were conducted using the modified surface instability detection apparatus to validate the accuracy of the proposed statistical damage model. Finally, the relationships between mechanical parameters and statistical parameters were studied and discussed.

1. Introduction

The deformation of rocks is a significant mechanical property in rock engineering [1], such as tunnel excavation, underground coal mining, and hydraulic fracturing. Numerous studies have been conducted to explore the relationship between the loading force and the deformation of geomaterials (also known as constitutive relationship) after the establishment of the first constitutive equation (i.e., Hook’s law) [213]. Statistical damage constitutive model, based on the Weibull distribution, plasticity theory, and rock failure criteria [1416], has been developed afterwards to further investigate the deformation process and failure mechanism of rocks under uniaxial and triaxial stress states [1723]. However, statistical damage model for rocks under plane-strain biaxial stress state (PSBSS) is rarely available.

The PSBSS [24], different from uniaxial and triaxial stress states, is a special case of the biaxial stress state. Geomaterials under the PSBSS are often encountered in geotechnical structures, such as pillar between adjacent tunnels and highwall and longwall mining coal pillar (Figures 1(a), 1(b), and 1(c)). In these engineering structures, one dimension (i.e., the direction of in Figure 1) is relatively larger than the others (i.e., the directions of and ), and the principal strain in the direction of the longest dimension is constrained and generally assumed to be zero (i.e., ) (Figure 1(d)).

Identically, plane-strain biaxial compression tests on brittle and ductile geomaterials are also limited, although studies have been done to explore the stress-strain behavior and constitutive model of geomaterials under biaxial stress state since 1969 [2, 2529]. Papamichos et al. [30] designed a plane-strain biaxial apparatus to investigate the surface spalling phenomena in rocks, indicating a shear-mode failure for brittle rocks under the PSBSS. Tao [31] tested the failure strength of soft and hard coal specimens under the PSBSS and they found out that greater failure strengths will appear under the PSBSS than those under uniaxial stress state for both kinds of coal specimens. In addition, the postpeak behavior of geomaterials (Figure 2) is an important factor to the safety of underground structures and should be considered when dealing with the geotechnical engineering [1]. The shortcoming of the above studies is that the stress-strain behaviors are not taken into consideration. Furthermore, it is difficult to establish physical models elaborating the postfailure behavior for rocks because of the plastic deformation. Thus, a modified statistical damage constitutive model should be established to illustrate the stress-strain behaviors, especially, the postpeak behavior of rocks under the PSBSS.

Accumulation and coalescence of stress-induced microcracks have been suggested as the fracture and damage mechanisms of rocks. Microcrack density was thought to be the governing factor for the elastic and fracture mechanical properties [3337]. As shown in Figure 2, the stress-strain curve implies that the rock is first considered to be linear elastic with a constant modulus () before the damage threshold is reached, and then the rock is thought to be damaged. The damage degree can be represented by the reduction of the elastic modulus [3840]. Residual stage occurs at the end of the postpeak stage in the stress-strain curve (Figure 2). This stage, representing the residual loading capability of rocks, is vital to the stability of structures. In order to take the residual strength () into consideration when establishing the constitutive damage model, some researchers [41, 42] introduced a self-determined coefficient. However, it is a challenge to determine these coefficients. Instead of introducing the predetermined coefficient, Zhao et al. [32] employed the Mohr-Coulomb criterion in the light of the classical damage model [17] to estimate the residual strength of rocks.

In this article, a modified constitutive damage model is presented to elaborate the stress-strain behavior of rocks under the PSBSS. We first introduce the constitutive equation for rocks under the PSBSS. Afterwards, a statistical damage constitutive model is established by analyzing the damage variable and residual strength of microscopic elements. Thirdly, we employ the modified Wiebols-Cook criterion, Drucker-Prager criterion, and extremum method to estimate the peak strength of rocks, strength level of microscopic elements, and statistical parameters, respectively. We then introduce the experimental methodology and, finally, validate and discuss the results.

2. Model

2.1. Elastic-Constitutive Model for Rocks under the PSBSS

According to the plane-strain concept, the principal strain in the direction of the longest dimension is constrained and can be assumed as zero (i.e., ) (Figures 1(c) and 1(d)) [43]. In addition, there is no stress perpendicular to the free surface after the excavation (i.e., ). Thus, the stress-strain relationship for isotropic elasticity material iswhere , , and are the maximum principle stress, elastic modulus, maximum principle strain, and Poisson’s ratio, respectively. The intermediate principle stress is closely related to maximum principle stress and .

To obtain the stress-strain curve, three stages should be settled. The linear elastic stage of rocks under the PSBSS can be determined by (1). After the elastic stage, the stress-strain behavior can be calculated by the degradation of modulus and solution of the damage variable. The last stage (i.e., residual stage) can be determined by considering the residual strength of the damaged rock.

2.2. Statistical Damage Constitutive Model for Rocks under the PSBSS
2.2.1. Evolution of the Damage Variable ()

In the new statistical damage constitutive model, rocks are assumed to consist of numerous mesoscopic elements. According to the statistical damage theory, any mesoscopic element has dual states (i.e., intact and damaged) and strengths of the mesoscopic elements follow a Weibull distribution [14, 18, 44]:where is the strength level and the scale parameter; statistical parameter () represents the shape of the function and determines the concentration of strength level ().

After the damage threshold point (Figure 2), Weibull distribution is employed to estimate the damage distribution of mesoscopic elements. The density of damaged elements can be determined by the damage variable () [17, 32]. As shown in Figure 3, with strength level increasing from 0 to , the damage variable () can be expressed as

2.2.2. Statistical Damage Constitutive Model Considering Residual Strength

To reflect the postpeak behavior and residual strength, a compressed rock is divided into two areas: damaged area (Sr) and undamaged area () (Figure 3). Strain-softening behavior can be performed by the degradation of the undamaged area. However, residual strength (i.e., residual stage) is difficult to illustrate without considering the net stress of the damaged area (Sr). In this new constitutive model, a net stress () is applied on the damaged portion.

Assuming that the effective stress () on the total area of the specimen consists of the net stress () on the damaged portion and net stress () on the undamaged portion, thus effective stress can be described as

Net stress () on the damaged portion (i.e., residual strength) can be determined by the Mohr-Coulomb criterion [32, 45]. For a pure friction material [3, 46, 47], peak strength increases linearly with the rise of residual strength () and can be theoretical analyzed and expressed as

withwhere is the peak strength under the PSBSS; and are cohesive strength and internal frication angle in the elastic stage, respectively; and are cohesive strength and internal frication angle in the residual strength stage, respectively. These parameters can be obtained by experimental test [45].

The undamaged portion is assumed to be elastic under the net stress of and follows the generalized Hooke’s law:where = , , and ; , , and are the Young’s modulus, strain, and Poisson’s ratio, respectively. These microscopic parameters can be replaced by , , and , which are same parameters on the macroscale [19]. Thus, (8) can be modified as follows:

Combining (1), (3), and (4) with (9), the modified statistical damage constitutive model for rocks under the PSBSS can be established and expressed as

2.3. Determination of Parameters
2.3.1. Modified Wiebols-Cook Criterion and PSBSS Peak Strength

Intermediate principle stress plays an important role in determining the rock strength under the PSBSS. Criteria, such as Mohr-Coulomb, Hoek-Brown, and Tresca failure criterion, should not be considered when establishing new constitutive model because these criteria failed to take the intermediate principle stress into consideration. Colmenares and Zoback [48, 49] suggested that the modified Wiebols-Cook criterion and Modified Lade criterion achieved good fits to the true triaxial test data comparing with other five criteria, namely, Mohr-Coulomb, Hoek and Brown, Drucker-Prager, and two empirical criteria. Because the modified Wiebols-Cook criterion estimated the failure strength more accurately for rocks which are highly dependent on the intermediate principle stress in this article [50], the modified Wiebols-Cook criterion was adopted when establishing the statistical damage model in order to estimate the PSBSS peak strength.

As an extension of the Circumscribed Drucker-Prager criterion [51], the modified Wiebols-Cook criterion implies that a rock fails if

withwhere and are the first and second deviatoric stress invariants, respectively. , , and are values which can be determined by mechanical and physical parameters of the material and can be expressed aswhere and ; and are internal friction angle and uniaxial compression strength, respectively.

Thus, according to the elastic-constitutive relationship of rocks under the PSBSS (i.e., (1)) and (11)~(16), the peak strength () under the PSBSS can be described as

2.3.2. Drucker-Prager Criterion and Strength Level ()

The distribution parameter of mesoscopic element (strength level ()) is correlated with damage variable (), as described in (3), and the strength level () can be estimated by the failure criterion of rocks [18, 52]. Tang and coworkers [53, 54] formulated the strength level in strain space. However, strength level is usually expressed by criteria in stress space instead of strain space. Two criteria, Mohr-Coulomb and Drucker-Prager criteria [20, 52, 55], are commonly adopted to determine the strength level in stress space.

The Drucker-Prager criterion for rocks under the PSBSS was employed and the value can be expressed as a function of its net stress and material parameters [20]:

withwhere and are material constants; and are the first stress invariant and second deviatoric stress invariant, respectively.

The strength level () can be obtained by combining (4) and (18)~(20):

It should be noted that strength level () determines the damage state of rock. When , the rock is undamaged/intact, while when , the rock is damaged.

2.3.3. Extremum Method and Statistical Parameters ( and )

The statistical parameters and determine the strain-softening behavior of rocks and can be calculated by the “extremum method” [56]. As shown in Figure 2, the derivative of stress should be equal to zero at the peak point of a stress-strain curve. Thus the boundary condition can be described aswhere and are peak stress and peak strain, respectively.

Differentiating (24), we can obtain

withwhere and are the strength level and damage variable at the peak point, respectively. can be determined by (23); then can be identified by (10). Then statistical parameter () can be rearranged by (3) as

Briefly, the stress-strain behavior of geomaterials can be illustrated by the following procedures:(1)Input mechanical and physical parameters including Young’s modulus (), Poisson’s ratio (), internal friction angle (), cohesive strength (), residual friction angle (), and residual cohesive strength ().(2)Determine the residual strength () and peak strength () under the PSBSS by (5) and (17), respectively.(3)Input the target range of strain into MATLAB for looping. Before looping, check the validity of the range.(4)Loop for each strain and determine the value of the damage variable (). Then calculate the stress based on (10).

3. Experimental Methodology

3.1. Sample Description and Preparation

To validate the proposed constitutive model, brittle (coal) and ductile (synthetic materials) specimens were employed to conduct laboratory tests under the PSBSS. Coal specimens (Figures 4(a) and 4(b)), obtained from the #3 coal seam at the 6303 longwall panel in the Baodian Coal Mine, China, were 70.7 × 70.7 × 70.7 mm3 in size. The average unit weight of coal specimen is 1360 kg/m3.

Synthetic materials (Figure 4(c)) were 100 × 100 × 100 mm3 cube blocks and they were obtained by mixing the cemented sand and plaster. The weight percentages of the sand, cement, and plaster were 40%, 18%, and 42%, respectively. All synthetic specimens were prepared by using a specific mould (Figure 4(d)). The physical and mechanical parameters of the prepared coal and synthetic specimens are shown in Table 1.

3.2. Experimental Apparatus

An apparatus, modified from the surface instability detection apparatus [30, 57, 58], was designed to achieve the PSBSS. A cube specimen can be placed between two rigid vertical sidewalls (Figure 5) and the adjustable wall, used to test specimens with different size, was bolted to prevent lateral deflection. Lube oil was adopted to minimize the friction at the interface. The compression experiments under the PSBSS were conducted on a rock servo-controlled system with a maximum loading capacity of 300 kN and a maximum displacement resolution of 0.001 mm. The strain control rate was 2.4 × 10−4/s.

4. Validation Results and Discussion

4.1. Stress-Strain Curves

The mechanical and statistical parameters of specimens can be determined (see Table 2) according to the parameters obtained from laboratory tests (Table 1). Stress-strain curves can be then plotted by employing the calculation procedure described in Section 2.3.3. Figure 6 illustrates the stress-strain curves derived from the experimental tests and the proposed statistical damage constitutive model. Figure 6(a) shows the stress-strain curves of coal specimens under the PSBSS, while Figure 6(b) presents the stress-strain curves of synthetic materials.

As shown in Figure 6(a), the stress-strain curves of coal specimens in the compression test under the PSBSS can be divided into four typical stages, namely, (1) original microcrack closure stage, (2) elastic deformation stage, (3) strain-softening stage, and (4) residual stage. In the first stage, stress-strain curve shows the downward concave because of the closure of some primary pores and voids. In the second stage, the loading force increases linearly with the axial stress. The peak strength can be obtained then and the strain-softening behavior follows by. With the generation and coalescence of cracks, an abrupt stress reduction occurs and finally the stress-strain curves reach the residual stage. Residual strengths are remarkable which may result from the confined pressure provided by the vertical walls, although the residual stages varied with the heterogeneity of coal specimens.

Figure 6(b) presents the stress-strain curves of synthetic materials obtained by the compression tests under the PSBSS. Similar to the stress-strain behavior of coal specimen, four typical stages can also be identified in the stress-strain curves of synthetic specimens. However, the original microcrack closure stages are unobvious, and strain-softening behavior and residual stage can be more easily identified compared to those of the coal specimen.

Theoretical curves of the coal specimen and synthetic materials are also presented in Figure 6. In general, the theoretical data has good agreement with the experimental observation and the typical stages (i.e., elastic deformation, strain-softening behavior, and residual stage) are well illustrated in theoretical curves. In the theoretical curves, the stress increases linearly with the strain prior to the peak strength. After the peak point, strain-softening behaviors occur. Finally, the theoretical curves reach the residual stage. Peak strengths calculated by the modified Wiebols-Cook criterion under the PSBSS and the residual strengths fit well with the experimental data. It should be noted that the original microcrack closure stages are difficult to illustrate in the new statistical damage constitutive model.

By comparing the stress-strain curves of coal specimens with that of synthetic specimens, we can easily find out that the strain-softening behaviors for two different materials are not the same. It also revealed that the damage in rocks has been initiated at the peak strength (i.e., peak damage variable () is nonzero; see Table 2) [19, 33]. These results in turn pose questions of what are the possible relations behind these parameters including statistical parameters ( and ) and physical parameters (peak strain and peak stress). Thus, the following parametric studies will examine the influence of peak strain on peak damage variation () and statistical parameters ( and ) (see Section 4.2).

4.2. Effect of Peak Strain on Peak Damage Variable and Statistical Parameters

Parametric studies were conducted to estimate the effect of peak strain on damage variable and statistical parameters, and results for the synthetic material are shown in Figure 7. The results for the coal specimens are similar to the synthetic material. It is clear that peak strain has a strong influence on the peak damage variable () and statistical parameters ( and ).

Figure 7(a) shows the peak damage variable increases logarithmically with the peak strain, while the statistical parameter () experiences a decrease in an exponential manner. Thus we can conclude that a higher peak strain implies a higher damage variable () and a lower statistical parameter . According to the damage theory, the statistical parameter () determines the softening behavior of the constitutive model, and a larger implies a higher uniformity and a higher brittleness [52]. However, statistical parameter () can be divided into two stages (Figure 7(b)). Prior to the peak strain of 0.06, this parameter experiences an increase, while, with a peak strain larger than 0.06, the statistical parameter decreases. Thus, peak strain can affect these mentioned parameters in different ways and should be carefully predetermined or tested. Also, as a compromise parameter, the peak strain can be adjusted in a small scale to fit the postpeak curve.

5. Conclusions

By employing the basic theory of damage mechanics, we established a statistical damage constitutive model for rocks under the PSBSS. The modified model was validated by the experimental results for brittle and ductile materials. On the basis of the analyses and calculation of this model, the following conclusion can be drawn:(1)An effective theoretical model to simulate the stress-strain curves of brittle and ductile rocks under the PSBSS is presented. In this new model, the modified Wiebols-Cook criterion, Druck-Prager criterion, and extremum method were employed to estimate the peak strength under the PSBSS, strength level, and statistical parameters, respectively.(2)Comparisons between the experimental and theoretical results were made and the results show that the modified constitutive model provided a good prediction of the stress-strain curves of rocks under the PSBSS tests. In particular, the calculated peak strength, strain-softening behavior, and residual strength fit well with the experimental data.(3)Strain-softening behavior in this model is determined by statistical parameters and . Peak strain which should be carefully predetermined or tested can affect parameters and in different manners.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

Acknowledgments

This work was supported by the National Basic Research Program of China 2014CB046300 and by the Priority Academic Program Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions (PAPD).