Abstract
Studying the mechanical behavior of rocks under real-time high-temperature conditions is of great significance for the development of energy caverns, nuclear waste disposal projects, and tunneling engineering. In this study, a real-time high-temperature impact compression test was conducted on Sejila Mountain granite to explore the effects of temperature and external load on its mechanical properties. Based on the concepts of damage mechanics and statistics, a coupled thermal-mechanical (T-M) damage constitutive model was established, which considers the temperature effect and uses the double-shear unified strength as the yield criterion. The parameter expressions were clarified, and the accuracy and applicability of the model were verified by experimental data. The research results indicated that high temperatures had an obvious damaging and deteriorating effect on the strength of the granite, while an increase in impact velocity had an enhancing effect on the strength of the granite. The established constitutive model theoretical curve and test curve showed a high degree of agreement, indicating that the coupled T-M model can objectively represent the evolution process of damage in rocks and the physical meaning of its parameters is clear.
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