Abstract

This paper presents a new analytical criterion for brittle failure of rocks and heavily over-consolidated soils. Griffith’s model of a randomly oriented defect under a biaxial stress state is used to keep the criterion simple. The Griffith’s criterion is improved because the maximum tensile strength is not evaluated at the boundary of the defect but at a certain distance from the boundary, known as half of the critical distance. This fracture criterion is known as the point method, and is part of the theory of critical distances, which is utilised in fracture mechanics. The proposed failure criterion has two parameters: the inherent tensile strength, σ 0, and the ratio of the half-length of the initial crack/flaw to the critical distance, a/L. These parameters are difficult to measure but they may be correlated with the uniaxial compressive and tensile strengths, σ c and σ t. The proposed criterion is able to reproduce the common range of strength ratios for rocks and heavily overconsolidated soils (σ c/σ t = 3–50) and the influence of several microstructural rock properties, such as texture and porosity. Good agreement with laboratory tests reported in the literature is found for tensile and low-confining stresses.

Highlights

  • The development of failure criteria is of primary importance in engineering practice

  • Crack propagation and damage are studied by the theory of fracture mechanics, which was initiated by Griffith (1921; 1924), focusing on brittle failure of glass

  • His work included the development of a failure criterion, which will be explained in detail

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The development of failure criteria is of primary importance in engineering practice. The theory of critical distances and a micromechanical model similar to that of Griffith are used to develop a simple failure criterion for brittle failure of rocks under a low confinement biaxial stress state. This model, despite its simplifying hypotheses, is theoretically based, uses rock parameters with physical meaning, and captures quite well the ratio between unconfined compressive strength and uniaxial tensile stress (σc/σt) observed in brittle rock failure

GRIFFITH’S CRITERION
THEORY OF CRITICAL DISTANCES
PROPOSED FAILURE CRITERION
COMPARISON AND DISCUSSION
Failure envelope
CONCLUSIONS
Methods
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