Abstract

Engineering rock mass in cold regions has obvious freeze–thaw damage as a result of extreme differences in temperature, rainfall, snow, and other factors, which is one of the main causes of frequent geological disasters. Therefore, it is important to investigate the deterioration mechanism and evolution laws of rock mass freeze–thaw damage. Considering a hydropower station’s left bank slope in a cold region, model testing and numerical testing of slope rock mass failure under freeze–thaw conditions are here carried out by developing a generalized model. The results reveal that heat is transmitted from the outside to the inside of the slope and that the rate of temperature change varies with depth; the frost-heave force causes tensile cracks in the rock mass, with crack propagation taking the form of a circular arc; the presence of an original structural plane influences the propagation direction of the frost-heave crack, whereas the freezing rate of the fissure water influences the amplitude and growth rate of the frost-heave force. Additionally, a novel method of measuring frost-heave force is proposed. The largest frost-heave force caused by water–ice phase change is 19.3 kPa, which is equivalent to 3.17 MPa of the actual slope.

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