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Sci Rep ; 13(1): 3850, 2023 Mar 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36890277

ABSTRACT

A series of creep tests were carried out on sandstone specimens with different pre-peak instantaneous damage characteristics under different confining pressures. The results revealed that the creep stress was the key factor affecting the occurrence of the three stages of creep, and the steady-state creep rate increased exponentially with increasing creep stress. Under the same confining pressure, the larger the instantaneous damage of the rock specimen was, the more quickly creep failure occurred and the lower the creep failure stress was. For the pre-peak damaged rock specimens, the strain threshold for accelerating creep was the same for a given confining pressure. The strain threshold increased with increasing confining pressure. In addition, the long-term strength was determined using the isochronous stress-strain curve and the variation in the creep contribution factor. The results revealed that the long-term strength decreased gradually with increasing pre-peak instantaneous damage under lower confining pressures. However, the instantaneous damage had little effect on the long-term strength under higher confining pressures. Finally, the macro-micro-failure modes of the sandstone were analyzed according to the fracture morphology observed via scanning electron microscopy. It was found that the macroscale creep failure patterns of the sandstone specimens could be divided into a shear-dominated failure mode under high confining pressures and a mixed shear-tensile failure mode under low confining pressures. At the microscale, as the confining pressure increased, the micro-fracture mode of the sandstone changed gradually from a single brittle fracture to a mixed brittle and ductile fracture mode.

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