<P>The numerical, discrete element, Discontinuous Deformation Analysis (DDA) method was developed by Dr. Gen-hua Shi while he was working at the University of California, Berkeley, under the supervision of Prof. Richard E. Goodman in the late 1980s. Two-dimensional DDA was published in 1993 and thre
Discontinuity Analysis for Rock Engineering
β Scribed by Stephen D. Priest (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 489
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Engineers wishing to build structures on or in rock use the discipline known as rock mechanics. This discipline emerged as a subject in its own right about thirty five years ago, and has developed rapidly ever since. However, rock mechanics is still based to a large extent on analytical techniques that were originally formulated for the mechanical design of structures made from manΒ made materials. The single most important distinction between man-made materials and the natural material rock is that rock contains fractures, of many kinds on many scales; and because the fractures - of whatever kin- represent breaks in the mechanical continuum, they are collectively termed 'discontinuities' . An understanding of the mechanical influence of these discontinuities is essential to all rock engineers. Most of the world is made of rock, and most of the rock near the surface is fractured. The fractures dominate the rock mass geometry, deformation modulus, strength, failure behaviour, permeability, and even the local magnitudes and directions of the in situ stress field. Clearly, an understanding of the presence and mechanics of the discontinuities, both singly and in the rock mass context, is therefore of paramount importance to civil, mining and petroleum engineers. Bearing this in mind, it is surprising that until now there has been no book dedicated specifically to the subject of discontinuity analysis in rock engineering.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xix
Introduction to discontinuities....Pages 1-23
Measurement of discontinuity characteristics....Pages 24-62
Discontinuity orientation....Pages 63-93
Discontinuity frequency....Pages 94-120
Discontinuity spacing....Pages 121-149
Discontinuity size....Pages 150-196
Stresses on discontinuities....Pages 197-218
Analysis of rigid blocks....Pages 219-258
Discontinuities and rock strength....Pages 259-299
Discontinuities and rock deformability....Pages 300-339
Fluid flow in discontinuities....Pages 340-381
Back Matter....Pages 445-473
β¦ Subjects
Geotechnical Engineering & Applied Earth Sciences
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