Fr. 70.00

The Coupled Theory of Mixtures in Geomechanics with Applications

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 6 to 7 weeks

Description

Read more

Geomaterials consist of a mixture of solid particles and void space that may be ?lled with ?uid and gas. The solid particles may be di?erent in sizes, shapes, and behavior; and the pore liquid may have various physical and chemical properties. Hence, physical, chemical or electrical interaction - tween the solid particles and pore ?uid or gas may take place. Therefore, the geomaterials in general must be considered a mixture or a multiphase material whose state is described by physical quantities in each phase. The stresses carried by the solid skeleton are typically termed "e?ective stress" while the stresses carried by the pore liquid are termed "pore pressure. " The summation of the e?ective stress and pore pressure is termed "total stress" (Terzaghi, 1943). For a free drainage condition or completely undrained c- dition, the pore pressure change is zero or depends only on the initial stress condition; it does not depend on the skeleton response to external forces. Therefore, a single phase description of soil behavior is adequate. For an intermediate condition, however, some ?ow (pore pressure leak) may take place while the force is applied and the skeleton is under deformation. Due to the leak of pore pressure, the pore pressure changes with time, and the e?ective stress changes and the skeleton deforms with time accordingly. The solution of this intermediate condition, therefore, requires a multi-phase c- tinuum formulations that may address the interaction of solid skeleton and pore liquid interaction.

List of contents

Flow in Geo-materials.- Coupled Theory of Mixtures.- Coupling Yield Criteria and Micro-mechanics with the Theory of Mixtures.- Finite Element Formulations.- Applications.- Advanced Topics.

Summary

Geomaterials consist of a mixture of solid particles and void space that may be ?lled with ?uid and gas. The solid particles may be di?erent in sizes, shapes, and behavior; and the pore liquid may have various physical and chemical properties. Hence, physical, chemical or electrical interaction - tween the solid particles and pore ?uid or gas may take place. Therefore, the geomaterials in general must be considered a mixture or a multiphase material whose state is described by physical quantities in each phase. The stresses carried by the solid skeleton are typically termed “e?ective stress” while the stresses carried by the pore liquid are termed “pore pressure. ” The summation of the e?ective stress and pore pressure is termed “total stress” (Terzaghi, 1943). For a free drainage condition or completely undrained c- dition, the pore pressure change is zero or depends only on the initial stress condition; it does not depend on the skeleton response to external forces. Therefore, a single phase description of soil behavior is adequate. For an intermediate condition, however, some ?ow (pore pressure leak) may take place while the force is applied and the skeleton is under deformation. Due to the leak of pore pressure, the pore pressure changes with time, and the e?ective stress changes and the skeleton deforms with time accordingly. The solution of this intermediate condition, therefore, requires a multi-phase c- tinuum formulations that may address the interaction of solid skeleton and pore liquid interaction.

Product details

Authors C R Song, C. R. Song, C.R. Song, George Voyiadjis, George Z Voyiadjis, George Z. Voyiadjis
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 06.10.2010
 
EAN 9783642064227
ISBN 978-3-642-06422-7
No. of pages 433
Dimensions 158 mm x 25 mm x 238 mm
Weight 679 g
Illustrations XI, 433 p.
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Technology > Mechanical engineering, production engineering

C, Klassische Mechanik, engineering, Classical and Continuum Physics, Solid Mechanics, Mechanics, Earth Sciences, Fluid mechanics, Fluid- and Aerodynamics, Fluids, Mechanics of solids, Mechanics, Applied, Engineering Fluid Dynamics, Earth Sciences, general

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.