1 Intro and Stress1
1 Intro and Stress1
EOSC364
Dr. Dan Faulkner Professor Dave Prior
Rock Mechanics
First 6 weeks: Rock mechanics/low temperature rock deformation
12 lectures 6 practicals
Lectures 5-8
Rock fracture
Lectures 9-12
Faults, friction and earthquakes
Recommended texts
1st 6 weeks: Rock Mechanics
Mechanics of Earthquakes and Faulting by Chris Scholz (2nd Edition)
Stress and Strain by Win Means Fundamentals of Rock Mechanics by Jaeger and Cook Fracture mechanics of rock by Atkinson Fracture mechanics by Lawn and Wilshaw Structural Geology textbooks for stress/strain
Mantle convection
Controlled by deformation of the mantle driven by heat
Material
Stress
A demonstration of stress
F=Ma
F = force, Newtons, N M = mass, kg a = acceleration, ms-2
Principal stresses
In two dimensions, the principal stresses are always the greatest and the least stresses. They are always at right angles to each other They are termed 1 (greatest) and 2 (least) The same concepts apply in 3D, with three principal orthogonal stresses, termed 1 2 and 3 where 2 is the intermediate principal stress
Shear stress,
2
x-plane y-plane
(normal to y direction) (normal to x direction)
Stress as a tensor
y
yx yy
x
xy
xx
xx xy ij = yy yx
xx xy xz ij = yx yy yz zy zz zx
xx
where i = j, normal stress (n) i j, shear stress ()
x y
xy xz
What is the normal stress (n) and shear stress () on a plane, given 1 and 2?
2 xy xx
x
Equations relating the principal stresses with normal and shear stresses
n = = 1 + 2
2
1 2
2
cos 2
? n? 2 1
1 2
2
sin 2
Equations relating the normal and shear stresses with the principal stresses
1 ( x y )2 + 4 2 1 = + 2 2 x + y 1 2 ( x y ) + 4 2 2 = 2 2
x + y
? n? 2
normal stress, n
The principal stresses are the greatest and the least stresses The planes on which the principal stresses act have no shear stress acting on them
The principal stresses are the greatest and the least stresses The planes on which the principal stresses act have no shear stress acting on them
yx
(yy,yx)
yy
xx
n
2
xy
(xx,xy)
1 yx yy