Abstract
This paper presents the investigation of the dynamic mechanical properties of coal rock under complex stress conditions at depth, based on the improved Separate Hopkinson Pressure Bar Test System. A total of 15 groups of coal samples were used to perform dynamic impact tests under different conditions. The changing rules of dynamic strength, crushing, fractal dimension and damage modes of coal under different stress conditions were analyzed. A total of nine groups of coal samples were selected for numerical simulation using ANSYS/LS-DYNA. The results show that: (1) The stress–strain curves of coal specimens under different strain rates, different confining pressures and axial pressures have basically the same trend and the curves show a certain jump forward. (2) The peak dynamic stress of the coal specimens increased linearly with the increase of strain rate and confining pressure, and the ambient pressure limited the expansion of internal cracks of the coal specimens under impact loading. Based on the experimental and simulated data, the maximum relative errors between the experimental and simulated data were determined to be 2.9578% for Group A, 6.177% for Group B, and 6.382% for Group C, respectively. (3) The damage modes of the coal samples under the three-dimensional dynamic-static combined loading were mainly “X” type and “conical” shear damage. The fractal dimension increases with the increase of strain rate, decreases with the increase of confining pressure, and first decreases and then increases with the increase of axial pressure. This research achievement can provide theoretical support for the prevention of dynamic disasters in deep coal mine engineering.
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