Abstract

Soft rocks are of great geological and geotechnical interest, due to their mechanical and structural characteristics falling between those of a soil and those of a rock. This presents several challenges for constitutive and numerical modelling. Here we propose a calibration strategy of an advanced kinematic hardening model with structure degradation against experimental data on soft rocks, accounting for their features at the micro- and macro-scales. The experimental results show a highly structured material, with strength and stiffness being controlled by inter-granular bonding as well as by mean effective stress. The clay content of soft rock samples seems to be a dominant factor: the specimens show lower stiffness and strength when the content is higher. Accordingly, the samples have been classified into two different types (A and B). The constitutive model reproduces well both the mechanically strong and stiff behaviour of Type A as well as the more ductile mechanical response of Type B specimens observed during drained triaxial compression tests. With increasing confining pressures, the transition from brittle and dilatant to more ductile and contractant behaviour observed for both types of rocks is well captured by the adopted constitutive model.

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