Abstract

Abstract The present study responds to the poor treatment given to dilatancy in classical rock mechanics post-failure problems such as tunnel or mine pillar design. A comprehensive review of the literature and observations in regard to published test results would indicate that dilatancy is highly dependent both on the plasticity already experienced by the material and confining stress; moreover, it also appears that scale may play a non-negligible role. In our article, we provide a detailed analysis of published test data with a view to proposing a sufficiently significant but conveniently simple formulation of the dilatancy angle that reflects these dependencies and that can be readily implemented in numerical codes. The model is then tested, demonstrating that it is capable of representing rock sample strain behaviour in compressive tests. Finally, the model is applied to the resolution of ground reaction curves for tunnels in poor-to-average-quality rock masses, showing a good correlation with results obtained using practical rock engineering techniques.

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