Experimental study of shear failure and crack propagation in water‐bearing coal samples

Abstract The design of dam bodies for underground reservoirs must account for how water affects shear failure and the evolution of fractures in coal pillars. In this work, we detect acoustic emissions in raw coal samples with different water content (0%, 5.35%, 17.88%, and 20.40%) and under uniaxial...

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Main Authors: Chuanjin Tang, Qiangling Yao, Zhenyu Li, Yun Zhang, Minghe Ju
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-10-01
Series:Energy Science & Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ese3.424
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spelling doaj-c6d4a8a4c33c46c39ac60d295456030d2020-11-25T01:18:25ZengWileyEnergy Science & Engineering2050-05052019-10-01752193220410.1002/ese3.424Experimental study of shear failure and crack propagation in water‐bearing coal samplesChuanjin Tang0Qiangling Yao1Zhenyu Li2Yun Zhang3Minghe Ju4State Key Laboratory of Coal Resources and Safe Mining China University of Mining and Technology Xuzhou ChinaState Key Laboratory of Coal Resources and Safe Mining China University of Mining and Technology Xuzhou ChinaSchool of Mines China University of Mining and Technology Xuzhou ChinaSchool of Energy Engineering Xi'an University of Science and Technology Xi'an ChinaDepartment of Civil Engineering Monash University Clayton Vic. AustraliaAbstract The design of dam bodies for underground reservoirs must account for how water affects shear failure and the evolution of fractures in coal pillars. In this work, we detect acoustic emissions in raw coal samples with different water content (0%, 5.35%, 17.88%, and 20.40%) and under uniaxial compression shear and use computed tomography to analyze the failed samples. The results show that the shear strength, shear displacement, cohesion, and internal friction angle all decrease with increasing water content, which is described by the revised Mohr‐Coulomb model for the case of water intrusion. The acoustic emission counts correlate strongly with the change in stress, and the cumulative acoustic emission counts are combined with shear stiffness to separate the fracture evolution process into five stages: crack closure, elastic deformation, stable crack propagation, unstable crack propagation, and failure. The ratios of the crack closure, initiation, and damage stress to the corresponding peak shear stress are essentially unaffected by the water content. Most cracks are tensile cracks, and an increase in the water content promotes the development of parallel fractures. These results are helpful for determining the size of coal pillars in underground reservoirs and for solving other underground engineering problems, such as support for water‐rich coal roadways.https://doi.org/10.1002/ese3.424coal samplecompression‐shear testcrack propagationunderground reservoirwater content
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chuanjin Tang
Qiangling Yao
Zhenyu Li
Yun Zhang
Minghe Ju
spellingShingle Chuanjin Tang
Qiangling Yao
Zhenyu Li
Yun Zhang
Minghe Ju
Experimental study of shear failure and crack propagation in water‐bearing coal samples
Energy Science & Engineering
coal sample
compression‐shear test
crack propagation
underground reservoir
water content
author_facet Chuanjin Tang
Qiangling Yao
Zhenyu Li
Yun Zhang
Minghe Ju
author_sort Chuanjin Tang
title Experimental study of shear failure and crack propagation in water‐bearing coal samples
title_short Experimental study of shear failure and crack propagation in water‐bearing coal samples
title_full Experimental study of shear failure and crack propagation in water‐bearing coal samples
title_fullStr Experimental study of shear failure and crack propagation in water‐bearing coal samples
title_full_unstemmed Experimental study of shear failure and crack propagation in water‐bearing coal samples
title_sort experimental study of shear failure and crack propagation in water‐bearing coal samples
publisher Wiley
series Energy Science & Engineering
issn 2050-0505
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Abstract The design of dam bodies for underground reservoirs must account for how water affects shear failure and the evolution of fractures in coal pillars. In this work, we detect acoustic emissions in raw coal samples with different water content (0%, 5.35%, 17.88%, and 20.40%) and under uniaxial compression shear and use computed tomography to analyze the failed samples. The results show that the shear strength, shear displacement, cohesion, and internal friction angle all decrease with increasing water content, which is described by the revised Mohr‐Coulomb model for the case of water intrusion. The acoustic emission counts correlate strongly with the change in stress, and the cumulative acoustic emission counts are combined with shear stiffness to separate the fracture evolution process into five stages: crack closure, elastic deformation, stable crack propagation, unstable crack propagation, and failure. The ratios of the crack closure, initiation, and damage stress to the corresponding peak shear stress are essentially unaffected by the water content. Most cracks are tensile cracks, and an increase in the water content promotes the development of parallel fractures. These results are helpful for determining the size of coal pillars in underground reservoirs and for solving other underground engineering problems, such as support for water‐rich coal roadways.
topic coal sample
compression‐shear test
crack propagation
underground reservoir
water content
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ese3.424
work_keys_str_mv AT chuanjintang experimentalstudyofshearfailureandcrackpropagationinwaterbearingcoalsamples
AT qianglingyao experimentalstudyofshearfailureandcrackpropagationinwaterbearingcoalsamples
AT zhenyuli experimentalstudyofshearfailureandcrackpropagationinwaterbearingcoalsamples
AT yunzhang experimentalstudyofshearfailureandcrackpropagationinwaterbearingcoalsamples
AT mingheju experimentalstudyofshearfailureandcrackpropagationinwaterbearingcoalsamples
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