Title: ROCK MECHANICS
1ROCK MECHANICS
- Rock and Soils 2006
- Don Cameron
2COURSE OUTLINE
- Engineering classification of rock
- Field and laboratory testing
- strength and deformation
- rock mass v rock substance
- Stability of slopes and excavations
- Foundations in rock
- deep and shallow
- settlements, bearing capacity
- Anchorages in rock
3INHERENT COMPLEXITIES
- Rock fracture
- under compressive stresses
- Size effects
- response of rock to loading affected by the size
of the loaded volume (joints fractures) - Tensile strength
- is low (similar to concrete) HOWEVER a rock mass
can have even less tensile strength
4COMPLEXITIES.
- Groundwater effects
- water in joints if under pressure, reduces
normal effective stress (less resistance along
joints) - water in permeable rocks (e.g. sandstone) ?
effective stress law - softening of clay seams argillaceous rocks
(e.g. shales)
5COMPLEXITIES.
- Weathering
- chemical/physical alteration, reduction of
engineering properties - limestone caverns, sinkholes Karst
- basic rocks with olivine (e.g. basalt) and
pyroxene minerals are reduced to montmorillonite
by hydrolysis
6STRUCTURAL FEATURES or DISCONTINUITIES
- Bedding planes
- Folds
- tension joints at the crest of a fold (strike,
dip shear joints) - folding may cause shear failure along bedding
planes (axial plane
or fracture cleavage)
7Folding
8DISCONTINUITIES
- Faults
- shear displacement zones - sliding
- Faults may contain
- Fault gouge (clay) weak!
- Fault breccia (re-cemented rock) weak!
- Rock flour weak!
- Angular fragments may be strong
9DISCONTINUITIES
- Shear zones
- bands of materials - local shear failure
- Dykes
- igneous intrusions (near vertical)
- weathered dykes, e.g. dolerite weathers to
montmorillonite - unweathered dykes attract high stresses
- Joints
- breaks with no visible displacement
10Joint Patterns
- sedimentary rocks usually contain 2 sets of
joints, orthogonal to each other and the bedding
plane
11JOINTS
- Open
- Filled
- Healed or closed
- Stepped
- Undulating
- Planar
- Rough
- Smooth
- Slickensided
12Order of Description of Rocks (AS 1726-1993)
13DESIGN IN ROCK (Lecture 1)
- Take into account
- Local geological structure
- Shear strength of the rock mass
- Impact of water on stability
- Rock anchoring?
- Drilling and blasting procedures
- Monitoring of stability
- the observational method
14Intact Rock
- Heterogeneous
- Anisotropic (soils less so)
- Spatial variability (soils the same)
- Yield mechanisms are non-linear depend on
stress level and rock type - Failures are often brittle
(soils strain soften or harden past the peak
strength)
15Rock Masses
- Contain discontinuities with little tensile
strength - Scale effect
- response is dependent on stressed volume
- Affected by groundwater weathering
- In-situ stresses difficult to estimate
16DEFINITIONS
- Dip angle, ?w
- the acute angle measured in a vertical plane
between the line of maximum dip in a
non-horizontal plane and the horizontal plane
- i.e. 0 ßw 90.
- Dip direction, ?w the geographical azimuth
measured in a clockwise direction from north (0)
of the vertical plane in which the dip angle is
measured i.e. 0 ?w 360.
17Dip Angle
North
Horizontal
?w
Line of maximum dip
18Dip direction
Azimuth is the direction of an object, measured
clockwise around the observer's horizon from
North, i.e. an object due north has an azimuth of
0,
19Dip Direction
North
Horizontal
?w
Line of maximum dip
20SLOPE DESIGN IN ROCK
Terminology
21Empirical Design
- EXPERIMENTAL EVIDENCE (empirical laws)
- Surveys of heights (H) of stable and unstable
slopes excavated in hard rock - - plotted in terms of the overall slope angle
- FINDINGS
- there is a practical limit to how steep slopes
can be (equation to the line has little use for
serious slope design) - some slopes remain stable near their practical
limit, many slopes were unstable at angles far
less than this angle
22Empirical design chart for slopes in hard
rockstable slopes small dots
23Slope Design in Rock Masses with Planar Defects
- A vertical slope is intersected by a planar weak
seam dipping at an angle ßw - The friction angle of the weak seam is 20
- The density of the rock overlying the seam is
2500kg/m3 - The slope is dry
24Maximum height v Angle of defect
25The geometry
26SLOPE DESIGN IN ROCK
- Step 1 one batter (no berms)
- Determine a safe batter angle (?f)
- overall height (H) of the slope
- strength of the intact rock
- geometry strength of discontinuities
- size and direction of external loading
- groundwater conditions
27Design steps
28SLOPE DIMENSIONS
- Step 2 need benches to catch rock falls?
- Bench widths 1 to 3 m in width
- Every 10 m height in weathered rock
- 10 20 m height in good rock
- Step 3 safety berms? benches 3 to 5 m wide
- Designed to catch more rock
- Evenly spaced on the slope, e.g. every 3 - 5
benches
29Overall slope angle (ßF)
From the geometry.
Note eqn. in text and Figs are in error
30SUMMARY
- Rock mechanics needs careful consideration of the
influence of defects on rock mass behaviour - Empirical methods for first assessment only
31Key Points
- Rock descriptions
- there is an Australian Standard
- Design
- control of risk
- Introduction to rock slopes