Abstract

Gypsum rock is highly sensitive to a water environment due to its unique physical and chemical properties, such as high solubility. After wetting, the internal microstructure of gypsum rock is damaged, and the mechanical properties deteriorate accordingly, leading to serious engineering problems for gypsum-bearing geotechnical structures. Therefore, it is particularly necessary to investigate the mechanical deterioration behavior of gypsum rock after wetting. In this paper, the mechanical behavior of gypsum rocks with different water contents were studied. The relationship between the rock water content and the water immersion time was established through the water content test. The scanning electron microscope (SEM) images of the gypsum rock after the water immersion showed that the internal microstructure of the gypsum rock became looser and more complex as the immersion time increased. The fractal dimensions of the SEM images were calculated to quantify the degree of damage to the gypsum rocks after wetting. These images showed that the degree of damage increased with the increasing immersion time, but the increase rate tended to be slow. The relationship between the rock water content and the mechanical responses of gypsum rock were established by triaxial compression tests, and the concomitant acoustic emission (AE) characteristics in the loading processes showed that the immersion time had a positive correlation with the AE frequency and a negative correlation with the AE cumulative count. Based on the AE characteristics, a damage constitutive model of gypsum rock as a function of immersion time was developed and this can reproduce the mechanical responses of gypsum rock after wetting.

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