Strain Hardening of a Porous Limestone

1967 ◽  
Vol 7 (03) ◽  
pp. 229-234 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.B. Cheatham

Abstract Applications of the mathematical theory of plasticity promises to lead to the solution of many drilling and rock mechanics problems. Because of mathematical considerations, the inelastic behavior of rock has frequently been represented by a perfectly plastic model in conjunction with a yield criteria of the Coulomb or Mohr type. The totality of all stress states for which a solid ceases to behave elastically can be represented as a limit surface in stress space. Probing of such limit surfaces indicates details of strain hardening which are not provided by the standard triaxial testing procedure. Probing tests of the limit surfaces have been performed on Cordova Cream limestone to provide data for extending plasticity theory to cover situations in which consolidation and strain hardening are present. Test results indicate that this highly porous limestone undergoes a permanent volume decrease when it is subjected to hydrostatic pressures in excess of 3,500 psi. A virgin sample tested under a confining pressure of 1,500 psi has a yield strength of 1,700 psi; however, if the sample is subjected to a consolidation pressure of 5,000 psi, before testing at 1,500 psi, the yield strength is raised to 2,300 psi. Thus, both consolidation and strain hardening are important considerations in describing the mechanical behavior of this limestone. Tests conducted with the axis of the core having different orientations indicate that this rock is also anisotropic. Portions of the initial and subsequent limit surfaces are determined for samples loaded either perpendicular or parallel to the bedding planes. INTRODUCTION Previous experimental work in rock mechanics indicates that no mathematically tractable constitutive theory is inclusive enough to describe the mechanical behavior exhibited by all types of rocks under all conditions of stress and temperature. Indeed, the type of deformation encountered in a single type of rock is known to depend upon the stress and temperature conditions in the rock during deformation.1-5 Certain rocks and minerals, notably those minerals composed of ionic salts, have been shown to exhibit plastic deformation when tested under conditions of high confining pressure.2 Since the mathematical theory of plasticity provides simplifications over the theory of elasticity in certain types of problems, such as those in which limit analysis can be applied, it is of interest to know under what conditions plasticity theory may be applied to rock mechanics problems. The following factors determine the nature of the deformation a particular specimen will undergo:the microscopic structure of the rock, i.e., the structure visible under an optical microscope, including number of phases, porosity, distribution of phases,the mineralogical structure of the solid phases,the conditions of stress and the rate of change of stress andthe temperature. Extensive experiments on Yule marble, Carthage marble, Solenhofen limestone and other calcerous rocks indicate that these relatively nonporous rocks deform plastically under certain conditions of loading, and creep under other conditions of loading.1-3 This study is concerned with the behavior of Cordova Cream limestone (Austin chalk) which is also composed almost entirely of calcite and thus has the same mineralogical composition but, because of a rather large porosity, it possesses a different microscopic structure. This investigation was undertaken to learn if Cordova Cream limestone deforms plastically despite the embrittling effect of the pore spaces, and to provide data which can be used to determine whether the mathematical theory of plasticity can describe the mechanical behavior of Cordova Cream limestone.

2011 ◽  
Vol 415-417 ◽  
pp. 146-150
Author(s):  
Lin Fang ◽  
Chun Xiang Cui ◽  
Tie Bao Wang ◽  
Chuang He ◽  
Kuo Jia

In order to increase the modifying effect, the Fe-V-Nb alloy was rapidly solidified with melt-spin method, and the nano-sized ribbon was gained at 40-45 rad/s. Subsequently, Fe-Si-Mn spring steels was modified by amorphous and nanocrystalline. The results show that the microscopic structure of Fe-Si-Mn spring steels modified by amorphous and nanocrystalline is better than micro-alloyed with the same amount of niobium and vanadium, the mechanical properties of Fe-Si-Mn spring steels modified by Fe-V-Nb intermediate alloy are improved evidently: the yield-strength is reached to 1484 Mpa, the yield ratio is reached to 0.94 and the hardness is reached to 64HRC when specimens quenched.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2020 ◽  
pp. 1-21 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rui Song ◽  
Lifu Zheng ◽  
Yao Wang ◽  
Jianjun Liu

As porous, heterogeneous, and anisotropic material, the microscopic structure of the rock has a significant influence on its mechanical properties. Rare studies were devoted to this area using pore scale modeling and simulations. In this paper, different types of sandstones are imaged using micro-CT technology. The rock porosity is obtained by filtering, binarization, and threshold segmentation. The texture coefficient (TC) and the tortuosity of the rock skeleton are calculated by open source program, where the tortuosity of the rock skeleton is firstly used to characterize the microscopic structure of the rock. Combining with the rock mechanics parameters obtained in the laboratory, the simulation of uniaxial compression is performed on the reconstructed pore scale rock finite element mesh model by ANSYS software. Young’s modulus, compressive strength, yield strength, shear modulus, and other related parameters obtained by numerical simulation are adopted to determine the optimal representative volume element (RVE) size. Moreover, the effects of microscopic structure characteristics on the mechanical properties of the rock are studied quantitatively. The results indicate that the averaged von Mises stress distribution, displacement field, and plastic strain field of rocks show anisotropy and heterogeneity. The stress concentration and the X-shaped conjugate plastic shear zone are investigated. The samples of S1∼S4 reach the elastic limit and enters the plastic yield state, when the strain is about 0.5%. And the critical yield strain of samples S5300-1∼S5400-2 is about 1%. Then, the quantitative relationships between porosity, TC, tortuosity of rock skeleton and rock mechanics parameters of digital rock samples are established and analyzed. The tortuosity of the rock skeleton is highly correlated with the mechanical parameters of the rock, i.e., Young’s modulus (R2 = 0.95), compressive strength (R2 = 0.94), yield strength (R2 = 0.92), and shear modulus (R2 = 0.94), which is believed to be more feasible to reveal the impacts of the microstructure of the rock on its mechanical properties.


2015 ◽  
Vol 49 (6) ◽  
pp. 2155-2163 ◽  
Author(s):  
Davood Fereidooni ◽  
Gholam Reza Khanlari ◽  
Mojtaba Heidari ◽  
Ali Asghar Sepahigero ◽  
Amir Pirooz Kolahi-Azar

2002 ◽  
Vol 17 (5) ◽  
pp. 991-1001 ◽  
Author(s):  
X. Y. Qin ◽  
J. S. Lee ◽  
C. S. Lee

The microstructures and mechanical behavior of bulk nanocrystalline γ–Ni–xFe (n-Ni–Fe) with x = ∼19–21 wt%, synthesized by a mechanochemical method plus hot-isostatic pressing, were investigated using microstructural analysis [x-ray diffraction, energy-dispersive spectroscopy, light emission spectrum, atomic force microscopy (AFM), and optical microscopy (OM)], and mechanical (indentation and compression) tests, respectively. The results indicated that the yield strength (σ0.2) of n-Ni–Fe (d ∼ 33 nm) is about 13 times greater than that of conventional counterpart. The change of yield strength with grain size was basically in agreement with Hall–Petch relation in the size range (33–100 nm) investigated. OM observations demonstrated the existence of two sets of macroscopic bandlike deformation traces mostly orienting at 45–55° to the compression axis, while AFM observations revealed that these bandlike traces consist of ultrafine lines. The cause for high strength and the possible deformation mechanisms were discussed based on the characteristics of microstructures and deformation morphology of n-Ni–Fe.


1933 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 151-155
Author(s):  
H. Hencky

Abstract The knowledge of the inelastic behavior of metals has experienced considerable growth in the last few years. To draw all the advantages possible from the experiments, frequently very difficult, an effort has been made to bring the entire development under some dominating physical ideas. These ideas are in fact very old, and deal mainly with the proper conception of the hidden elastic energy that is responsible for the statical component of the strain hardening. The analytical treatment of the inelastic behavior gives promise of being valuable not only in the testing of materials, but even for the designer of machines used in the forming of metals.


Author(s):  
Yoichi Takeda ◽  
Zhanpeng Lu ◽  
Takeshi Adachi ◽  
Qunjia Peng ◽  
Jiro Kuniya ◽  
...  

It is known that stress corrosion cracking (SCC) found in the operational power plants show complex cracking behaviors and it’s resulted in complex crack shape e.g. crack branching and its uneven crack front. For the cracking near the weldment, this is due to crack penetrated along the complex distribution of residual stress and strain hardened area. In this investigation, in order to advance the accuracy for crack growth prediction with considering such complex fields, theoretical formulation for SCC growth was further modified. Hardness of the materials, which is a measureable parameter even in operational power plant, was focused on to reflect strain hardening of the component like heat affected zone of the weldments. The theoretical formulation for SCC growth has terms with yield strength of the material and strain hardening exponent to describe crack tip strain rate. Strain hardening was simulated by cross rolling with the range of 4 – 32% as thickness reduction. Correlation between yield strength, strain hardening exponent at 288°C and Vickers hardness was obtained by means of tensile tests and hardness tests on 316L stainless steel. It was observed that a monotonic increase in Vickers hardness and yield strength with degree of reduction in thickness worked by cross rolling. Relationship between Vickers hardness and yield strength was found to have linear correlation. Further confirmation was made by plotting the reported mechanical properties data in terms of Vickers hardness. In addition, linear relationship was found between yield strength and strain hardening exponent. These relationships were introduced into SCC theoretical formulation and a SCC growth rate prediction curve in terms of Vickers hardness was proposed. SCC crack growth evaluation tests with selected work hardened 316L stainless steel were performed in oxygenated pure water environment at 288°C to confirm the predictability of the formulation. The prediction curve had a good agreement with available literature data as well as obtained crack growth rates in the hardness range of 140–300HV which was likely expected one in weld HAZ.


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