Abstract
The presence of fractures, joints, bedding planes, and faults within rock masses results in their inherent heterogeneity and discontinuity. These structural defects alter the mechanical properties of rock masses, reducing their structural strength and stiffness, and contributing to anisotropy. In addition to planar cracks, non-planar cracks are frequently found within rock masses due to geological evolution and local stress variations. While the mechanisms of planar crack propagation and fracture in both two-dimensional and three-dimensional spaces have been extensively studied and understood, research on non-planar cracks has largely been confined to two-dimensional aspects. This study addresses the limitations by successfully creating brittle solid specimens with three-dimensional non-planar internal cracks. Uniaxial compression tests and numerical simulations were conducted to investigate the propagations and fracture behaviors of various shapes of three-dimensional non-planar internal cracks. The experiments identified two primary macroscopic failure modes: symmetric non-planar internal cracks exhibiting non-tip initiation failure, and asymmetric non-planar internal cracks displaying tip initiation on the upper side and non-tip initiation on the lower side. The failure strengths of non-planar internal cracks were significantly higher than those of planar cracks, and the size of the cracks had minimal effect on their failure strengths. Notably, from initiation to failure, symmetric non-planar internal cracks did not generate any wing cracks, whereas asymmetric non-planar internal cracks were accompanied by petal-shaped cracks, wing cracks, and lance-shaped cracks. Under uniaxial compression, non-planar internal cracks propagated at extremely high speeds, resulting in rough and uneven fracture surfaces. In addition to Type III lance-shaped cracks, dynamic fracture characteristic areas and Wallner lines were also observed on the fracture surfaces. This study provides valuable insights into the fracture behavior of three-dimensional non-planar cracks and a reference basis for understanding their propagation and failure mechanisms.
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