Abstract

Abstract The thermomechanical (TM) coupling effects of rock bursts have attracted considerable attention from researchers owing to the high geothermal and geostresses in deep tunnels in regions such as Western China. To study the brittleness and rock burst mechanism under TM conditions, various tests, such as splitting, uniaxial compression, rock burst tendency, and rock burst physical model tests, were conducted at temperatures ranging from 20°C to 80°C. The results revealed that, when granite samples were heated, their tensile strengths decreased in the splitting tests. Their peak stresses and the corresponding strains increased; their macroscopic tensile fracture surfaces became more evident; and the microcosmic tensile properties of intergranular fractures became prominent under uniaxial compression. Rock burst physical model tests and acoustic emission monitoring results revealed that, at higher temperatures, the fracture degree and failure range were larger, the energy was higher and more concentrated during failure, and failure occurred earlier. The brittleness index B, rock burst tendency Wet, and σθ/σc all exhibited a clear increasing tendency with an increase in temperature. The rock burst mechanism, considering the temperature effect, can be summarized as follows: the increase in brittle tensile fracture components and geostress caused by temperature increasing is conducive to the rapid release of energy, which will promote the occurrence of rock burst. The researching result is of great academic value and practical significance for the prevention, design, and safe construction of rock burst in deep high geothermal tunnels.

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