THREE-DIMENSIONAL COSSERAT CONTINUUM MODELING OF FRACTURED ROCK MASSES

2010 ◽  
Vol 02 (03n04) ◽  
pp. 217-234
Author(s):  
IOANNIS STEFANOU ◽  
JEAN SULEM

The behavior of rock masses is influenced by the existence of discontinuities, which divide the rock in joint blocks making it an inhomogeneous anisotropic material. From the mechanical point of view, the geometrical and mechanical properties of the rock discontinuities define the mechanical properties of the rock structure. In the present paper we consider a rock mass with three joint sets of different dip angle, dip direction, spacing and mechanical properties. The dynamic behavior of the discrete system is then described by a continuum model, which is derived by homogenization. The homogenization technique applied here is called generalized differential expansion homogenization technique and has its roots in Germain's (1973) formulation for micromorphic continua. The main advantage of the method is the avoidance of the averaging of the kinematic quotients and the derivation of a continuum that maps exactly the degrees of freedom of the discrete system through a one-to-one correspondence of the kinematic measures. The derivation of the equivalent continuum is based on the identification for any virtual kinematic field of the power of the internal forces and of the kinetic energy of the continuum with the corresponding quantities of the discrete system. The result is an anisotropic three-dimensional Cosserat continuum.

Author(s):  
Naoki Soneda ◽  
Kenji Nishida ◽  
Kenji Dohi ◽  
Akiyoshi Nomoto ◽  
William L. Server ◽  
...  

The through-wall attenuation of neutron fluence of reactor pressure vessel (RPV) steels is often expressed using an exponential decay function based on some estimate of displacements per atom (dpa). In order to verify this function, an irradiation project was performed in which 18 layers of Charpy specimens and one central temperatue control layer were stacked in a block to simulate a 190 mm thick RPV wall. Three western-type RPV steels (medium and low copper plates and a high copper Linde 80 flux weld) were irradiated in this project. Mechanical property tests of these materials have been performed under a consortium of EPRI, CRIEPI, NRI-Rez and ATI Consulting to fully characterize the mechanical properties in terms of Charpy transition temperature and upper-shelf energy, as well as reference fracture toughness using the Master Curve. Some results have been reported at previous PVP conferences. In this paper, we report the results of microstructural characterization using three-dimensional atom probe tomography (APT) of the medium copper plate and the high copper weld metal. The microstructures obtained by APT reasonably explain the changes in mechanical properties of these materials, and the difference in the response of these materials to irradiation was also identified. The mixed effect of fluence/flux/spectrum is discussed from the microstructural point of view.


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