Abstract

Fully understanding the influence of water on the rock materials' mechanical properties is of great significance to the safety design and evaluation in rock engineering. In this study, sandstone was pretreated with different wetting-drying cycles (0-15), and its pore characteristics were characterized by low-field nuclear magnetic resonance (LF-NMR) and scanning electron microscope (SEM) methods. Then, the split Hopkinson pressure bar (SHPB) tests with the same impact velocity were carried out in its dry and saturated states, respectively. The effects of water saturation on the dynamic behavior of sandstone under different porosity conditions and their mechanisms were emphasized. The results show that with the increase of cycle numbers, the porosity of sandstone increases, the dynamic strength and the total energy dissipation decreases. Moreover, the proportion of post-peak energy dissipation rises, and the degree of fragmentation intensifies. With the increase of porosity, the effect of water saturation on dynamic strength changes from enhancement to weakening. This may be related to the competition between the the Stefan effect and the contribution of pore water pressure. Finally, a dynamic damage constitutive model considering the coupling effect of the wetting-drying cycles and dynamic loads was established, and its effectiveness was verified.

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