• Title/Summary/Keyword: Accumulated fracture density

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Mechanical Properties of Carbon/Carbon Composites Densified by HIP Technique

  • Manocha, L.M.;Warrier, Ashish;Manocha, S.;Banerji, S.;Sathiyamoorthy, D.
    • Carbon letters
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    • v.6 no.1
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    • pp.6-14
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    • 2005
  • The study of mechanical properties and fracture behaviour of carbon/carbon composites is significant to its application and development. These are dependent on microstructure and properties of reinforcing fibers and matrix, fiber/matrix interface and porosity/cracks present in the composites. In the present studies high-density carbon/carbon composites have been prepared using PAN and various pitch based carbon fibers as reinforcements and pitch as matrix with repeated densification cycles using high-pressure impregnation and carbonization technique. Scanning electron microscopy has been used to study the fracture behaviour of the highly dense composites and correlated with structure of the composites. The geometry of reinforcement and presence of unfilled voids/cracks was found to influence the path of crack propagation and thereby the strength of composites. The type of stresses (tensile or compressive) accumulated also plays an important role in fracture of composites.

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Effects of Geological Structures on Slope Stability : An Example from the Northwestern Part of Daegu, Korea (퇴적암 내의 지질구조가 비탈면 안정성에 미치는 영향 : 대구 북서부 지역의 예)

  • Ko, Kyoung-Tae;Choi, Jin-Hyuck;Kim, Young-Seog
    • The Journal of Engineering Geology
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    • v.22 no.1
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    • pp.1-13
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    • 2012
  • The purpose of this work is to gain a better understanding of the interrelationships between geological structures and slope failure in sedimentary rocks. In the studied slopes, construction-related slope failure could only be observed on the south-dipping slopes. This indicates that slope stability may be dependent on the angular relationships between the dip direction of bedding and the orientation of the slope. Slope failure continued, post-construction, around large fault zones in the studied outcrop; these fault damage zones are, however, not easily recognized in the field. Here we suggest a new method that uses accumulated fracture density to precisely identify fault damage zones. Multiple-faced slopes are now increasingly being exposed during large-scale construction projects in South Korea. This multiple-faced slope analysis indicates that the stability of a slope should be evaluated by identifying domains, through the analysis of possible slopes and their angular relationships with bedding and other discontinuities, prior to construction. Therefore, careful consideration of geological structures such as bedding and other discontinuities, and their angular relationships during the design of cuttings through sedimentary rocks, will increase the efficiency of construction and enable the safe construction of more stable slopes that will retain their stability after construction.