Investigation of the Mechanical Behavior of 3D Printed Polyamide-12 Joints for Reduced Scale Models of Rock Mass

2020 
This study presents the experimental results of the mechanical characterization of artificial rock joints constructed by 3D-printing (3DP). The mechanical behavior of rock masses is controlled by the presence of joints. Understanding the mechanical behavior of rock joints is essential to predict their influence on a rock mass. The application of innovative 3DP technology in rock mechanics to model artificial rock-like joints allows strict control of joint geometry (orientation, roughness, number of rock bridges, etc.), and thus of its mechanical behavior. The 3DP technology used in this work is selective laser sintering, and the material is Polyamide 12. Geometric characterization shows that this technology gives high dimensional precision for details smaller than 0.4 mm. More than 30 discontinuous samples were printed to investigate the global mechanical properties of a joint relative to its geometric features including Young’s Modulus (E), shear stiffness (ks), cohesion (cj), friction angle (φj) and dilation (i). The results show that the number of rock bridges (Nrb) and the roughness significantly influence the mechanical properties. A failure criterion that considers these parameters is proposed. These 3D-printed joints can be used in physical modeling of rock mass to understand the influence of the fractures on its stability by applying scaling laws. The application of scale factors to the experimental results shows the possibility of representing actual rocks with artificial 3DP joints.
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