Abstract

Granite is a typical crystalline material, often used as a building material, but also a candidate host rock for the repository of high-level radioactive waste. The petrographic texture—including mineral constituents, grain shape, size, and distribution—controls the fracture initiation, propagation, and coalescence within granitic rocks. In this paper, experimental laboratory tests and numerical simulations of a grain-based approach in two-dimensional Particle Flow Code (PFC2D) were conducted on the mechanical strength and failure behavior of Alashan granite, in which the grain-like structure of granitic rock was considered. The microparameters for simulating Alashan granite were calibrated based on real laboratory strength values and strain-stress curves. The unconfined uniaxial compressive test and Brazilian indirect tensile test were performed using a grain-based approach to examine and discuss the influence of mineral grain size and distribution on the strength and patterns of microcracks in granitic rocks. The results show it is possible to reproduce the uniaxial compressive strength (UCS) and uniaxial tensile strength (UTS) of Alashan granite using the grain-based approach in PFC2D, and the average mineral size has a positive relationship with the UCS and UTS. During the modeling, most of the generated microcracks were tensile cracks. Moreover, the ratio of the different types of generated microcracks is related to the average grain size. When the average grain size in numerical models is increased, the ratio of the number of intragrain tensile cracks to the number of intergrain tensile cracks increases, and the UCS of rock samples also increases with this ratio. However, the variation in grain size distribution does not have a significant influence on the likelihood of generated microcracks.

Highlights

  • The use of granite as a structural engineering material is continuously increasing because of its excellent mechanical properties and resistance to weathering and other environmental influences.Granite is recognized as an ideal storage material for high-level radioactive waste [1] and as a geothermal reservoir for heat extraction [2,3,4]

  • Previous laboratory studies of the relationships between the various mechanical properties of granitic rock indicated that mechanical strength and fracture development are related to the inherent microstructure parameters, including mineral composition and distribution, mineral shape, mineral grain size, and pre-existing microcracks [8,9,10,11,12]

  • Laboratory experimental results presented in this paper show that the uniaxial compressive strength (UCS) of Alashan granite varies from 113.1 MPa to 159.3 MPa, and the uniaxial tensile strength (UTS) values, based on Brazilian indirect tensile testing, range from 7.8 MPa to 11.0 MPa

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Summary

Introduction

The use of granite as a structural engineering material is continuously increasing because of its excellent mechanical properties and resistance to weathering and other environmental influences.Granite is recognized as an ideal storage material for high-level radioactive waste [1] and as a geothermal reservoir for heat extraction [2,3,4]. The use of granite as a structural engineering material is continuously increasing because of its excellent mechanical properties and resistance to weathering and other environmental influences. The mechanical properties of granitic rock and fracture development are important for a variety of engineering applications such as tunneling, mining, quarrying operations, and slope stability. Quantitative petrographic analysis shows that granitic rock, at the grain scale, shows mineral aggregation with microcracks, which results in a complex inherent. Previous laboratory studies of the relationships between the various mechanical properties of granitic rock indicated that mechanical strength and fracture development are related to the inherent microstructure parameters, including mineral composition and distribution, mineral shape, mineral grain size, and pre-existing microcracks [8,9,10,11,12]. Merrian et al [13] demonstrated a definite relationship between tensile strength and quartz content of the granite rocks they investigated

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