Deformation and Failure Characteristics of Sandstone Subjected to
True-Triaxial Unloading: An Experimental and Numerical Study
Abstract
The influence of maximum principal stress level on true-triaxial
unloading behaviors and the failure mechanism of sandstone samples were
comprehensively investigated by laboratory tests and discrete element
simulations. The results show that the level of σ1 at unloading point
significantly affects the deformation and failure characteristics of
sandstone samples under true-triaxial unloading conditions. As the level
of σ1 at unloading point increases, the ultimate bearing capacity of
sandstone sample is increasingly strengthened, while the sample
collapses more easily during the unloading process, and the failure mode
of sandstone sample changes from mixed tensile-shear failure to shear
failure. With the increase in the level of σ1 at unloading point, the
accumulative micro-cracks at the unloading point and micro-crack
generation rate during the unloading phase exhibit an increasing trend,
while the sum of micro-cracks at the unloading phase and the ratio
between the amount of tensile micro-cracks and shear micro-cracks
roughly show a downward trend. The formation of macro fracture in
sandstone sample is closely related to the stress conditions and
material inhomogeneity. The tensile fracture in the upper right part of
sample when the level of σ1 is relatively low should be attributed to
the superiority in tensile contacts between particles in terms of
contact number and corresponding tensile force.