Advances in Materials Science and Engineering (Jan 2016)

A Fractional Creep Constitutive Model for Frozen Soil in Consideration of the Strengthening and Weakening Effects

  • Feng Hou,
  • Quanming Li,
  • Enlong Liu,
  • Cheng Zhou,
  • Mengke Liao,
  • Huiwu Luo,
  • Xingyan Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2016/5740292
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2016

Abstract

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The triaxial creep tests of frozen silty clay mixed with sands were performed under different pressures, and the test results demonstrated that, under the low confining pressure, when the shear stress is lower than the long-term strength, the test specimen exhibits an attenuation creep because the strengthening effect is greater than the weakening effect. When the shear stress is higher than the long-term strength, the test specimen exhibits a nonattenuation creep due to the level of the strengthening and weakening effects change in different stages. As the confining pressure increases, the test specimens only exhibit an attenuation creep because of the enhancing strengthening effect. Both the hardening parameter and the damage variable were introduced to describe the strengthening and weakening effects, respectively, and a new creep constitutive model for frozen soil considering these effects was put forward based on the theory of elastoviscoplastic and the fractional derivative. Finally, the model parameters were analyzed and their determination method was also provided to reveal the trend of parameters according to the triaxial test results. The calculated results of the constitutive model show that the proposed model can describe the whole creep process of frozen soil well.