Abstract

Due to frequent water level fluctuations and complex hydrochemical environments, rock slopes in reservoir areas progressively deteriorate and become unstable. This study investigated the coupling effect of drying−wetting cycles and acidic solutions on the physical and mechanical properties, strain field evolution, failure mode, and micro-mechanism of red sandstone using a series of laboratory experiments (wave velocity tests, uniaxial compression tests, the digital image correlation method, scanning electron microscopy, and X-ray diffraction). The results showed that with increasing drying−wetting cycles, the mass, P-wave velocity, elastic modulus, and uniaxial compressive strength decreased monotonically, while the water absorption and apparent strain in the strain localization band increased. Moreover, the failure mode transitioned gradually from tensile failure to shear failure or tensile-shear composite failure. The decrease in the solution pH values aggravated the changes in the physical and mechanical parameters and contributed to an increase in the secondary cracks and the occurrence of shear behavior. In addition, the coupling effect of drying−wetting cycles and acidic solutions accelerated the worsening of the microstructure and the dissolution of minerals, resulting in a loose structure with well-developed pores and fissures. These changes provide a favorable explanation for the mechanical property deterioration of red sandstone subjected to acidic drying−wetting cycles.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call