Abstract

The knowledge about thermo-mechanical properties of granite is still limited to some extent. Individual measurements are necessary to obtain reliable properties for specific granite types. A reliable numerical model of thermal cracking behaviours of granite exposed to extreme high temperatures (e.g. 800–1000 °C) is missing. In this study, the impact of temperature up to 1000 °C on physical, mechanical, and thermal properties as well as thermo-mechanical coupled behaviour of Eibenstock granite was investigated by laboratory testing and numerical simulations. The physical properties including mineral composition, density, P-wave velocity, and open porosity are measured to be temperature dependent. Uniaxial compression and Brazilian tests were carried out to measure uniaxial compressive strength (UCS), Young’s modulus, stress–strain relationship, and tensile strength of Eibenstock granite before and after thermal treatment, respectively. Thermal properties including specific heat, thermal conductivity, thermal diffusivity, and linear thermal expansion coefficient are also measured and found to be temperature dependent, especially the expansion coefficient which shows a steep increase around 573 °C as well as at 870 °C. The numerical simulation code FLAC3D was used to develop a numerical scheme to simulate the thermal-induced damage of granite at high temperatures. Statistical methods combined with real mineral composition were used to characterize the heterogeneity of granite. The numerical model is featured with reliable temperature-dependent parameters obtained from laboratory tests. It can well reproduce the laboratory results in form of thermal-induced micro- and macrocracks, as well as the stress–strain behaviour and the final failure pattern of Eibenstock granite after elevated temperatures up to 1000 °C. The simulation results also reveal that the thermal-induced microcracks are randomly distributed across the whole sample. Although most thermal-induced damages are tensile failures, shear failure begins to develop quickly after 500 °C. The obvious UCS reduction in granite due to heating is mainly caused by the increase in shear failure. The simulation also shows that the dominant impact of α–β quartz transition is widening pre-existing cracks rather than the formation of new microcracks.

Highlights

  • Granite is often considered as potential host rock for nuclear waste disposals, tunnels, caverns, etc., and was used as construction material for historical buildings and monuments [6, 30]

  • The numerical simulation code FLAC3D was used to develop a numerical scheme to simulate the thermal-induced damage of granite at high temperatures

  • The indirect tensile strength of Eibenstock granite at room temperature is 7.8 MPa. It shows a decrease at elevated temperatures, reducing by nearly 25% at 400 °C compared with samples not heated

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Granite is often considered as potential host rock for nuclear waste disposals, tunnels, caverns, etc., and was used as construction material for historical buildings and monuments [6, 30]. To obtain a deeper understanding of the thermal-induced damage of granite under elevated temperatures, numerical simulation has become an important method. Yang et al [37] used a particle-based method to investigate the failure behaviour of pre-holed granite specimens after elevated temperature treatment. They use heterogeneous models, the mineral properties (especially the thermal expansion coefficient) are temperature independent. Wang and Konietzky [30] proposed a model with temperature-dependent thermo-mechanical parameters to simulate thermal cracking of granite. Accurate temperature-dependent properties of granite exposed to high temperatures are necessary for building a reliable numerical model. Numerical models considering heterogeneity and temperature-dependent properties are built to investigate the effect of high temperatures on granite. The presented approach provides a deeper understanding of the thermomechanical behaviour of granite after high-temperature treatment

Sample preparation and test methods
Mineral composition
Density
P-wave velocity
UCS and peak axial strain
Elastic modulus
Tensile strength
Thermal properties
Linear thermal expansion coefficient
Geometry and boundary conditions
Statistical distribution parameters for heterogeneity characterization
Temperature-dependent parameters
Thermal-induced cracks
Granite strength after heat treatment
Findings
Conclusion
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