Energies (Feb 2023)
Experimental Investigation on the Deformation Characteristics and Mechanical Behaviors of Tectonic Coal under Complex Unloading Confining Pressure
Abstract
Conventional and cyclic unloading tests with different unloading rates were conducted to study the influences of unloading patterns and rates on the deformation characteristics and mechanical properties of tectonic coal. The results demonstrate that, under continuous unloading, a lower unloading rate promotes an increase in the circumferential strain but inhibits increases in axial strain. A lower unloading rate was found to be able to promote volume expansion under the cyclic unloading path, and the axial, circumferential, and volume strains increased stepwise with the unloading levels, but the increment of the strains decreased with the number of cycles in the same unloading level. It was easier for tectonic coal to reach the elastic limit by a low speed unloading rate when the unloading level was small, and volume dilatation was promoted when the unloading level was large. In both unloading patterns, the tangential modulus and the Poisson ratio were proportional to the unloading rate. Compared with continuous unloading, the cyclic unloading pattern was found to have a significant delaying and inhibiting effect on damage expansion, and thus higher mechanical strength and more structurally stable tectonic coal responses were observed.
Keywords