Abstract

Understanding intermediate principal stress influences on deformation characteristics and failure mechanism of fractured rock from deep engineering often necessitates long term on-site detection and complex experimental research, although very limited efficacy can be obtained. With presently available experimental data on conventional triaxial cuboid noncoplanar fissured sandstones, this study further investigated the effects of differential stress (σ2 − σ3) and rock bridge inclination angle (β30°, β60°, β90°, β120°, and β150°) on their damage evolution processes and failure modes based on 3D discrete element methods (PFC3D). Numerical simulation results indicated that the peak strength of the fissured sandstone under the same state of horizontal principal stress shows an overall increasing pattern with the increase of the inclination angle of the rock bridge, while its peak strain displays a decreasing and then increasing trend. Besides, in this work, five failure modes, nine crack types and two kinds of stress–strain curves are summarized which are significantly affected by the horizontal principal stress, rock bridge inclinations or cooperative interaction. Differential stress value of 15 MPa is an important threshold for determining the residual strength of the stress–strain curve from present to absent. The cracking and force chain evolution processes of five failure modes were analyzed in order to discover the corresponding failure mechanisms. Finally, differential stress and flaw inclination influences on rock mechanical parameters and failure behavior have significant implications for strategies of the design, operation, and maintenance of rock engineering under severe conditions in the underground.

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