1 Stress III Mohr
1 Stress III Mohr
1 Stress III Mohr
In 2D space (e.g., on the s1s2 , s1s3, or s2s3 plane), the normal stress (sn) and the shear stress (ss), could be given by equations (1) and (2) in the next slides
Note: The equations are given here in the s1s2 plane, where s1 is greater than s2. If we were dealing with the s2s3 plane, then the two principal stresses would be s2 and s3
Normal Stress
The normal stress, sn:
(1)
sn = c + r cos
Where
c = (s1+s2)/2 is the center, which lies on the normal stress axis (x axis) r = (s1-s2)/2 is the radius
= 2q
Sign Conventions
sn is compressive when it is +, i.e., when sn>0 sn is tensile when it is -, i.e., when sn< 0
(a maximum) (a minimum )
There is no shear stress on the three principal planes (perpendicular to the principal stresses)
Shear Stress
The shear stress
ss = (s1-s2)/2 sin2q
(2)
where = 2q
ss = r sin
ss > 0 represents left-lateral shear ss < 0 represents right-lateral shear ss = 0 at q = 0o or 90o or 180o (a min) ss = (s1-s2)/2 at q = + 45o (maximum shear stress) The maximum ss is 1/2 the differential stress
Plot the normal stress, sn, vs. shear stress, ss, on a graph paper using arbitrary scale (e.g., mm scale!) Calculate: Center c = (s1+s2)/2 Radius r = (s1-s2)/2 Note: Diameter is the differential stress (s1-s2) The circle intersects the sn (x-axis) at the two principal stresses (s1 and s2)
Multiply the physical angle q by 2 The angle 2q is from the cs1 line to any point on the circle +2q (CCW) angles are read above the x-axis -2q (CW) angles below the x-axis, from the s1 axis The sn and ss of a point on the circle represent the normal and shear stresses on the plane with the given 2q angle NOTE: The axes of the Mohr circle have no geographic significance!
Mohr Circle in 3D
When q = 90o then cos2q = -1 and sn= (s1+s2)/2 - (s1-s2)/2 which reduces to a minimum sn= (s1+s2 - s1+s2)/2 sn= 2s2/2 sn= s2
Uniaxial Stress (compression or tension) One principal stress (s1 or s3) is non-zero, and the other two are equal to zero
Uniaxial compression Compressive stress in one direction: s1 > s2=s3 = 0 |a 0 0| |0 0 0| |0 0 0| The Mohr circle is tangent to the ordinate at the origin (i.e., s2=s3= 0) on the + (compressive) side
Uniaxial Tension
Tension in one direction: 0 = s1 = s2 > s3
|0 |0 |0
0 0| 0 0| 0-a|
The Mohr circle is tangent to the ordinate at the origin on the - (i.e., tensile) side
Axial (confined) compression: s1 > s2 = s3 > 0 |a 0 0| |0 b 0| |0 0 b| Axial extension (extension): s1 = s2 > s3 > 0 |a 0 0| |0 a 0| |0 0 b| The Mohr circle for both of these cases are to the right of the origin (non-tangent)
Biaxial Stress: Two of the principal stresses are non-zero and the other is zero Pure Shear: s1 = -s3 and is non-zero (equal in magnitude but opposite in sign) s2 = 0 (i.e., it is a biaxial state) The normal stress on planes of maximum shear is zero (pure shear!) |a 0 0 | |0 0 0 | |0 0 -a| The Mohr circle is symmetric w.r.t. the ordinate (center is at the origin)
Triaxial Stress: s1, s2, and s3 have non-zero values s1 > s2 > s3 and can be tensile or compressive Is the most general state in nature |a 0 0 | |0 b 0 | |0 0 c | The Mohr circle has three distinct circles
Triaxial Stress
General Compression
General Tension
Isotropic Stress
The 3D, isotropic stresses are equal in magnitude in all directions (as radii of a sphere)
Magnitude = the mean of the principal stresses sm= (s1+s2+s3)/3 = (s11+s22+s33 )/3
P = s1= s2= s3 when principal stresses are equal
i.e., it is an invariant (does not depend on a specific coordinate system). No need to know the principal stress; we can use any! Leads to dilation (+ev & -ev); but no shape change ev=(v-vo)/vo= v/vo [no dimension]
v and vo are final and original volumes
Stress in Liquids
Fluids (liquids/gases) are stressed equally in all directions (e.g. magma); e.g.: Hydrostatic, Lithostatic, Atmospheric pressure All of these are pressure due to the column of water, rock, or air, respectively:
P = rgz
Hydrostatic Pressure: s1 = s2 = s3 = P |P 0 0| |0 P 0| |0 0 P| All principal stresses are compressive and equal (P) No shear stress exists on any plane All orthogonal coordinate systems are principal coordinates Mohr circle reduces to a point on the sn axis
Hydrostatic Tension The stress across all planes is tensile and equal There are no shearing stresses Is an unlikely case of stress in the earth
Deviatoric Stress
Pressure is the mean of the principal stresses (may be neglected in most problems). Only causes volume change. Deviators components are calculated by subtracting the mean stress (pressure) from each of the normal stresses of the general stress tensor (not the shear stresses!). Causes shape change and that it the part which we are most interested in.
sT=sm+sd or sd=sT-sm
Confining Pressure
In experimental rock deformation, pressure is called confining pressure, and is taken to be equal to the s2 and s3 (uniaxial loading)
This is the pressure that is hydraulically applied around the rock specimen In the Earth, at any point z, the confining pressure is isotropic (lithostatic) pressure: P = rgz
Decomposition of Matrix
Decomposition of the total stress matrix into the mean and deviatoric matrices
Differential Stress
The difference between the maximum and the minimum principal stresses (s1-s2) Is always positive Its value is: twice the radius of the largest Mohr circle It is twice the maximum shear stresses Note: ss = (s1-s2)/2 sin2q
Effective Stress
Its components are calculated by subtracting the internal pore fluid pressure (Pf) from each of the normal stresses of the external stress tensor This means that the pore fluid pressures opposes the external stress, decreasing the effective confining pressure
The pore fluid pressure shifts the Mohr circle toward lower normal stresses. This changes the applied stress into an effective stress
Effective Stress
|s11 s12 s13 | | Pf 0 0 | |s11- Pf s12 s13 | |s21 s22 s23 | - | 0 Pf 0 |=|s 21 s22 Pf s23 | |s31 s32 s33 | | 0 0 Pf | |s 31 s32 s33- Pf |
Mechanical behavior of a brittle material depends on the effective stress, not on the applied stress