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Keywords = low confining stress

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20 pages, 11873 KB  
Article
Axial Compressive Performance of Wood-Cored GFRP Sandwich Columns
by Yuping Kan, Yixin Feng, Zhongping Xiao, Wei Pan, Zhaoyan Cui and Lingfeng Zhang
Buildings 2025, 15(19), 3632; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15193632 - 9 Oct 2025
Viewed by 129
Abstract
Paulownia wood, as a fast-growing natural material, exhibits inherently low axial compressive strength. To improve the axial structural performance of Paulownia wood, wood-cored glass fiber-reinforced polymer (GFRP) sandwich Paulownia wood columns were developed in this study. Nevertheless, the behavior of such columns remained [...] Read more.
Paulownia wood, as a fast-growing natural material, exhibits inherently low axial compressive strength. To improve the axial structural performance of Paulownia wood, wood-cored glass fiber-reinforced polymer (GFRP) sandwich Paulownia wood columns were developed in this study. Nevertheless, the behavior of such columns remained largely unexplored—particularly under elevated temperatures and upon subsequent cooling. Consequently, an experimental program was conducted to characterize the influences of GFRP wrapping layers, steel hoop end confinement, high temperature, post-cooling strength recovery, and chamfer radius on the axial compressive performance of the columns. End crushing occurred in the absence of steel hoops, whereas mid-height fracture dominated when end confinement was provided. As the temperature rose from room temperature to 100 °C and 200 °C, the load-bearing capacity of the columns decreased by 38.26% and 54.05%, respectively, due to the softening of the GFRP composites. After cooling back to room temperature, the post-high-temperature specimens recovered approximately 95% of their original capacity, confirming that no significant thermal decomposition had been initiated. The load-bearing capacity also increased significantly with the number of GFRP layers, as the additional thickness provided both higher axial load capacity and enhanced lateral confinement of the wood core. Relative to a 4.76 mm chamfer, a 9.52 mm radius increased axial capacity by 14.07% by mitigating stress concentration. A theoretical model accounting for lateral confinement was successfully developed to predict the axial load-bearing capacity of the wood-cored GFRP sandwich columns. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Performance Analysis of Timber Composite Structures)
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27 pages, 8798 KB  
Article
Monotonic Behaviour and Physical Characteristics of Silty Sands with Kaolinite Clay
by Davor Marušić and Vedran Jagodnik
Geotechnics 2025, 5(4), 70; https://doi.org/10.3390/geotechnics5040070 - 9 Oct 2025
Viewed by 76
Abstract
This study investigates the behaviour of dense silty sands with kaolinite clay under static drained/undrained conditions at low confining stress. Conventional laboratory tests assessed the mixtures’ physical properties, but standard void ratio methods proved inadequate for silty sands with kaolinite. Despite targeting 80% [...] Read more.
This study investigates the behaviour of dense silty sands with kaolinite clay under static drained/undrained conditions at low confining stress. Conventional laboratory tests assessed the mixtures’ physical properties, but standard void ratio methods proved inadequate for silty sands with kaolinite. Despite targeting 80% relative density, specimens exhibited loose sand behaviour in both drained and undrained tests. With increasing kaolinite content, conventionally reconstituted mixtures exhibit reduced peak stress ratios up to 10% fines, with little change beyond, while critical ratios generally rise at 25 kPa but remain unchanged or decrease slightly at 50 kPa. Analytical redefinition of minimum/maximum void ratios (based on sand–clay volumetric fractions) improved specimen reconstitution, yielding dense behaviour matching that of the host sand. The alternatively reconstituted mixtures display increasing drained peaks and minor changes in undrained peaks with increasing kaolinite content, with critical ratios increasing markedly at 25 kPa and only slightly at 50 kPa. However, this analytical void ratio determination method is limited to non-expansive, low-plasticity clays. Void ratios in silty sands with clay mineras are influenced by confining stress, drainage, saturation, clay content, and the sand skeleton structure. Unlike pure sands, these mixtures exhibit variable void ratios due to changes in the clay phase under different saturation levels. A new evaluation method is needed that accounts for clay composition, saturation-dependent consistency, and initial sand skeleton configuration to characterise these soils accurately. The findings highlight the limitations of conventional approaches and stress the need for advanced frameworks to model complex soil behaviour in geotechnical applications. Full article
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12 pages, 2841 KB  
Article
Mesoscopic Liquids Emit Thermal Waves Under Shear Strain or Microflow
by Laurence Noirez, Eni Kume and Patrick Baroni
Liquids 2025, 5(4), 27; https://doi.org/10.3390/liquids5040027 - 9 Oct 2025
Viewed by 107
Abstract
Liquids like water are not expected to produce a thermal change under shear strain or flow (away from extreme conditions). In this study, we reveal experimental conditions for which the conventional athermal hydrodynamic assumption is no longer valid. We highlight the establishment of [...] Read more.
Liquids like water are not expected to produce a thermal change under shear strain or flow (away from extreme conditions). In this study, we reveal experimental conditions for which the conventional athermal hydrodynamic assumption is no longer valid. We highlight the establishment of non-equilibrium hot and cold thermal states occurring when a mesoscopic confined liquid is set in motion. Two stress situations are considered: low-frequency shear stress at large strain amplitude and microfluidic transport (pressure gradient). Two liquids are tested: water and glycerol at room temperature. In confined conditions (submillimeter scale), these liquids exhibit stress-induced thermal waves. We interpret the emergence of non-equilibrium temperatures as a consequence of the solicitation of the mesoscopic liquid elasticity. In analogy with elastic deformation, the mesoscopic volume decreases or increases slightly, which leads to a change in temperature (thermo-mechanical energy conversion). The energy acquired or released is converted to heat or cold, respectively. To account for these non-equilibrium temperatures, the mesoscopic flow is no longer considered as a complete dissipative process but as a way of propagating shear and thus compressive waves. This conclusion is consistent with recent theoretical developments showing that liquids propagate shear elastic waves at small scales. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Physics of Liquids)
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26 pages, 9106 KB  
Article
Axial Performance of GFRP-Confined High-Fly-Ash Coal-Gangue Self-Compacting Concrete: Strength Enhancement and Damage Evolution
by Baiyun Yu, Abudusaimaiti Kali, Hushitaer Niyazi and Hongchao Zhao
Buildings 2025, 15(18), 3327; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15183327 - 15 Sep 2025
Viewed by 404
Abstract
As infrastructure construction expands, the massive consumption of traditional concrete materials has led to resource shortages and environmental pollution. Utilizing industrial wastes such as coal gangue and fly ash to produce high-performance concrete is an important pathway toward a greener construction industry. However, [...] Read more.
As infrastructure construction expands, the massive consumption of traditional concrete materials has led to resource shortages and environmental pollution. Utilizing industrial wastes such as coal gangue and fly ash to produce high-performance concrete is an important pathway toward a greener construction industry. However, concrete incorporating high volumes of fly ash and coal gangue (i.e., high-volume fly-ash coal-gangue self-compacting concrete, CGSC) suffers from low strength and high brittleness due to the inherent deficiencies of its constituents. This study proposes using glass fiber-reinforced polymer (GFRP) tubes for external confinement to improve the axial compressive capacity and deformability of CGSC. A total of 27 concrete cylinders were prepared and tested under axial compression, with real-time acoustic emission (AE) monitoring. The variables examined include the coarse aggregate type (coal-gangue and natural gravel), GFRP tube thickness (5 mm and 8 mm), and fly-ash content (80%, 85%, 90%). The stress–strain response of each specimen and the failure evolution of internal cracks were recorded throughout the loading process. The results show that GFRP tube confinement markedly increases the axial strength and ductility of CGSC. AE features exhibited staged behavior that closely mirrored the stress–strain curves. This correspondence reveals the progression of internal cracks under confinement and indicates that AE is an effective tool for damage monitoring in such composites. The findings provide a new technical approach for the efficient reuse of solid waste in concrete and offer a theoretical and practical basis for applying FRP composite structures in underground support engineering. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Materials, and Repair & Renovation)
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17 pages, 8502 KB  
Article
Seven Millennia of Cedrus atlantica Forest Dynamics in the Western Rif Mountains (Morocco)
by Francisca Alba-Sánchez, Daniel Abel-Schaad, José Antonio López-Sáez, Daniel Romera-Romera, Sebastián Pérez-Díaz and Antonio González-Hernández
Forests 2025, 16(9), 1441; https://doi.org/10.3390/f16091441 - 10 Sep 2025
Viewed by 624
Abstract
Atlas cedar (Cedrus atlantica (Endl.) Manetti ex Carrière) is an endemic and relict conifer species from northwestern Africa, relatively drought-tolerant but also highly sensitive to recurrent summer heat stress. Cedar forests have undergone a dramatic range contraction in recent decades. The development [...] Read more.
Atlas cedar (Cedrus atlantica (Endl.) Manetti ex Carrière) is an endemic and relict conifer species from northwestern Africa, relatively drought-tolerant but also highly sensitive to recurrent summer heat stress. Cedar forests have undergone a dramatic range contraction in recent decades. The development of effective conservation strategies requires long-term perspectives to understand how forests have responded to past disturbances. We present a multi-proxy, high-resolution analysis of a 122 cm-deep fossil record (Merj Lkhil; LKH) located at 1213 m a.s.l. in Jbel Bou Hachem (Moroccan Rif), providing insights into the fragmentation of cedar stands. Cedrus likely formed extensive lowland populations during the final stages of the Late Glacial and began migrating upslope during the Greenlandian. It reached its maximum extent in the Rif around 7000 cal yr BP. Thereafter, increasing aridity, enhanced seasonality, and growing anthropogenic pressure triggered its long-term decline. This trajectory involved a vertical reorganization of montane ecosystems, with Cedrus progressively retreating within mid- and low-elevation forests, while deciduous oaks maintained a long-term co-dominance and Q. ilex L. gradually expanded, especially at lower elevations. Today, Cedrus is confined to isolated high-elevation stands in Jbel Bou Hachem. These relic populations should be prioritized for conservation under ongoing climate and land-use change. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Forest Ecology and Management)
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23 pages, 5651 KB  
Article
Creep Tests and Fractional Creep Damage Model of Saturated Frozen Sandstone
by Yao Wei and Hui Peng
Water 2025, 17(16), 2492; https://doi.org/10.3390/w17162492 - 21 Aug 2025
Viewed by 633
Abstract
The rock strata traversed by frozen shafts in coal mines located in western regions are predominantly composed of weakly cemented, water-rich sandstones of the Cretaceous system. Investigating the rheological damage behavior of saturated sandstone under frozen conditions is essential for evaluating the safety [...] Read more.
The rock strata traversed by frozen shafts in coal mines located in western regions are predominantly composed of weakly cemented, water-rich sandstones of the Cretaceous system. Investigating the rheological damage behavior of saturated sandstone under frozen conditions is essential for evaluating the safety and stability of these frozen shafts. To explore the damage evolution and creep characteristics of Cretaceous sandstone under the coupled influence of low temperature and in situ stress, a series of triaxial creep tests were conducted at a constant temperature of −10 °C, under varying confining pressures (0, 2, 4, and 6 MPa). Simultaneously, acoustic emission (AE) energy monitoring was employed to characterize the damage behavior of saturated frozen sandstone under stepwise loading conditions. Based on the experimental findings, a fractional-order creep constitutive model incorporating damage evolution was developed to capture the time-dependent deformation behavior. The sensitivity of model parameters to temperature and confining pressure was also analyzed. The main findings are as follows: (1) Creep deformation progressively increases with higher confining pressure, and nonlinear accelerated creep is observed during the final loading stage. (2) A fractional-order nonlinear creep model accounting for the coupled effects of low temperature, stress, and damage was successfully established based on the test data. (3) Model parameters were identified using the least squares fitting method across different temperature and pressure conditions. The predicted curves closely match the experimental results, validating the accuracy and applicability of the proposed model. These findings provide a theoretical foundation for understanding deformation mechanisms and ensuring the structural integrity of frozen shafts in Cretaceous sandstone formations of western coal mines. Full article
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21 pages, 8385 KB  
Article
Hydraulic Fracture Propagation Behavior in Tight Conglomerates and Field Applications
by Zhenyu Wang, Wei Xiao, Shiming Wei, Zheng Fang and Xianping Cao
Processes 2025, 13(8), 2494; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13082494 - 7 Aug 2025
Viewed by 327
Abstract
The tight conglomerate oil reservoir in Xinjiang’s Mahu area is situated on the northwestern margin of the Junggar Basin. The reservoir comprises five stacked fan bodies, with the Triassic Baikouquan Formation serving as the primary pay zone. To delineate the study scope and [...] Read more.
The tight conglomerate oil reservoir in Xinjiang’s Mahu area is situated on the northwestern margin of the Junggar Basin. The reservoir comprises five stacked fan bodies, with the Triassic Baikouquan Formation serving as the primary pay zone. To delineate the study scope and conduct a field validation, the Ma-X well block was selected for investigation. Through triaxial compression tests and large-scale true triaxial hydraulic fracturing simulations, we analyzed the failure mechanisms of tight conglomerates and identified key factors governing hydraulic fracture propagation. The experimental results reveal several important points. (1) Gravel characteristics control failure modes: Larger gravel size and higher content increase inter-gravel stress concentration, promoting gravel crushing under confining pressure. At low-to-medium confining pressures, shear failure primarily occurs within the matrix, forming bypassing fractures around gravel particles. (2) Horizontal stress differential dominates fracture geometry: Fractures preferentially propagate as transverse fractures perpendicular to the wellbore, with stress anisotropy being the primary control factor. (3) Injection rate dictates fracture complexity: Weakly cemented interfaces in conglomerates lead to distinct fracture morphologies—low rates favor interface activation, while high rates enhance penetration through gravels. (4) Stimulation strategy impacts SRV: Multi-cluster perforations show limited effectiveness in enhancing fracture network complexity. In contrast, variable-rate fracturing significantly increases stimulated reservoir volume (SRV) compared to constant-rate methods, as evidenced by microseismic data demonstrating improved interface connectivity and broader fracture coverage. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Structure Optimization and Transport Characteristics of Porous Media)
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15 pages, 3175 KB  
Article
Creep Deformation Mechanisms of Gas-Bearing Coal in Deep Mining Environments: Experimental Characterization and Constitutive Modeling
by Xiaolei Sun, Xueqiu He, Liming Qiu, Qiang Liu, Limin Qie and Qian Sun
Processes 2025, 13(8), 2466; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13082466 - 4 Aug 2025
Viewed by 390
Abstract
The impact mechanism of long-term creep in gas-containing coal on coal and gas outbursts has not been fully elucidated and remains insufficiently understood for the purpose of disaster engineering control. This investigation conducted triaxial creep experiments on raw coal specimens under controlled confining [...] Read more.
The impact mechanism of long-term creep in gas-containing coal on coal and gas outbursts has not been fully elucidated and remains insufficiently understood for the purpose of disaster engineering control. This investigation conducted triaxial creep experiments on raw coal specimens under controlled confining pressures, axial stresses, and gas pressures. Through systematic analysis of coal’s physical responses across different loading conditions, we developed and validated a novel creep damage constitutive model for gas-saturated coal through laboratory data calibration. The key findings reveal three characteristic creep regimes: (1) a decelerating phase dominates under low stress conditions, (2) progressive transitions to combined decelerating–steady-state creep with increasing stress, and (3) triphasic decelerating–steady–accelerating behavior at critical stress levels. Comparative analysis shows that gas-free specimens exhibit lower cumulative strain than the 0.5 MPa gas-saturated counterparts, with gas presence accelerating creep progression and reducing the time to failure. Measured creep rates demonstrate stress-dependent behavior: primary creep progresses at 0.002–0.011%/min, decaying exponentially to secondary creep rates below 0.001%/min. Steady-state creep rates follow a power law relationship when subject to deviatoric stress (R2 = 0.96). Through the integration of Burgers viscoelastic model with the effective stress principle for porous media, we propose an enhanced constitutive model, incorporating gas adsorption-induced dilatational stresses. This advancement provides a theoretical foundation for predicting time-dependent deformation in deep coal reservoirs and informs monitoring strategies concerning gas-bearing strata stability. This study contributes to the theoretical understanding and engineering monitoring of creep behavior in deep coal rocks. Full article
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22 pages, 8767 KB  
Article
Experimental and Numerical Investigation of Shear Performance of RC Deep Beams Strengthened with Engineered Cementitious Composites
by Hamsavathi Kannan, Sathish Kumar Veerappan and Madappa V. R. Sivasubramanian
Constr. Mater. 2025, 5(3), 51; https://doi.org/10.3390/constrmater5030051 - 31 Jul 2025
Viewed by 403
Abstract
Reinforced concrete (RC) deep beams constructed with low-strength concrete are susceptible to sudden splitting failures in the strut region due to shear–compression stresses. To mitigate this vulnerability, various strengthening techniques, including steel plates, fiber-reinforced polymer sheets, and cementitious composites, have been explored to [...] Read more.
Reinforced concrete (RC) deep beams constructed with low-strength concrete are susceptible to sudden splitting failures in the strut region due to shear–compression stresses. To mitigate this vulnerability, various strengthening techniques, including steel plates, fiber-reinforced polymer sheets, and cementitious composites, have been explored to confine the strut area. This study investigates the structural performance of RC deep beams with low-strength concrete, strengthened externally using an Engineered Cementitious Composite (ECC) layer. To ensure effective confinement and uniform shear distribution, shear reinforcement was provided at equal intervals with configurations of zero, one, and two vertical shear reinforcements. Four-point bending tests revealed that the ECC layer significantly enhanced the shear capacity, increasing load-carrying capacity by 51.6%, 54.7%, and 46.7% for beams with zero, one, and two shear reinforcements, respectively. Failure analysis through non-linear finite element modeling corroborated experimental observations, confirming shear–compression failure characterized by damage in the concrete struts. The strut-and-tie method, modified to incorporate the tensile strength of ECC and shear reinforcement actual stress values taken from the FE analysis, was used to predict the shear capacity. The predicted values were within 10% of the experimental results, underscoring the reliability of the analytical approach. Overall, this study demonstrates the effectiveness of ECC in improving shear performance and mitigating strut failure in RC deep beams made with low-strength concrete. Full article
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31 pages, 8111 KB  
Article
Design and Experiment of a Greenhouse Autonomous Following Robot Based on LQR–Pure Pursuit
by Yibin Hu, Jieyu Xian, Maohua Xiao, Qianzhe Cheng, Tai Chen, Yejun Zhu and Guosheng Geng
Agriculture 2025, 15(15), 1615; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15151615 - 25 Jul 2025
Viewed by 625
Abstract
Accurate path tracking is crucial for greenhouse robots operating in complex environments. However, traditional curve tracking algorithms suffer from low tracking accuracy and large tracking errors. This study aim to develop a high precision greenhouse autonomous following robot, use ANSYS Workbench 19.2 to [...] Read more.
Accurate path tracking is crucial for greenhouse robots operating in complex environments. However, traditional curve tracking algorithms suffer from low tracking accuracy and large tracking errors. This study aim to develop a high precision greenhouse autonomous following robot, use ANSYS Workbench 19.2 to perform stress and deformation analysis on the robot, then propose a path tracking method based on Linear Quadratic Regulator (LQR) to optimize the pure tracking to ensure high precision curved path tracking for curved tracking, finally perform a comparative simulation analysis in MATLAB R2024a. The structural analysis shows that the maximum equivalent stress is 196 MPa and the maximum deformation is 1.73 mm under a load of 600 kg, which are within the yield limit of 45 steel. Simulation results demonstrate that at a speed of 2 m/s, the conventional Pure Pursuit algorithm incurs a maximum lateral error of 0.3418 m and a heading error of 0.2669 rad under high curvature conditions. By contrast, the LQR–Pure Pursuit algorithm reduces the peak lateral error to 0.0904 m and confines the heading error to approximately 0.0217 rad. Experimental validation yielded an RMSE of 0.018 m for lateral error and 0.016 m for heading error. These findings confirm that the designed robot can sustain its payload under most operating scenarios and that the proposed tracking strategy effectively suppresses deviations and improves path-following accuracy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Technology)
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15 pages, 2836 KB  
Article
Pressure-Amplified Structural Superiority in Silty Clays: Dynamic Divergence Between Undisturbed and Remolded States
by Jinhu Hu, Banglong Zhou, Penggang Li, Jing Wang and Yayuan Yang
Buildings 2025, 15(13), 2319; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15132319 - 2 Jul 2025
Viewed by 403
Abstract
Silty clay is extensively distributed in northern China. Numerous seismic events have demonstrated that underground structures embedded in silty clay strata are prone to severe damage during earthquakes. This study employs dynamic cyclic triaxial tests on undisturbed and remolded specimens (50–300 kPa confining [...] Read more.
Silty clay is extensively distributed in northern China. Numerous seismic events have demonstrated that underground structures embedded in silty clay strata are prone to severe damage during earthquakes. This study employs dynamic cyclic triaxial tests on undisturbed and remolded specimens (50–300 kPa confining pressures) to pioneer the quantification of pressure-amplified structural superiority. The experimental results reveal that: (1) Undisturbed soils exhibit 20–30% higher maximum shear stress (τdmax) and shear modulus (Gdmax) than remolded counterparts at 300 kPa, far exceeding the <5% deviation at 50 kPa due to enhanced particle-cementation synergy under pressure. (2) The normalized shear modulus ratio (Gd/Gdmax) exhibits low sensitivity to confining pressure, with Gd/Gdmaxγd relationship curves predominantly confined within a narrow band range. A triphasic evolutionary characteristic is manifested in the progressive reduction of Gd/Gdmax with increasing shear strain (γd), and quasi-linear attenuation is observed within the shear strain range of 1 × 10−4γd ≤ 1 × 10−2. (3) Remolded and undisturbed specimens demonstrate close correspondence in damping ratio (λd) across consolidation pressures. Under identical γd conditions, undisturbed specimens consistently exhibit lower λd values than remolded counterparts, attributable to enhanced energy dissipation resulting from structural homogenization in remolded soils, with λdmax magnitudes ranging between 0.2 and 0.3. The research provides mechanistic insights for seismic design of underground structures in silty clay terrains, particularly regarding disturbance sensitivity under deep burial conditions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Building Structures)
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22 pages, 6042 KB  
Article
Critical Threshold for Fluid Flow Transition from Linear to Nonlinear in Self-Affine Rough-Surfaced Rock Fractures: Effects of Shear and Confinement
by Hai Pu, Yanlong Chen, Kangsheng Xue, Shaojie Zhang, Xuefeng Han and Junce Xu
Processes 2025, 13(7), 1991; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13071991 - 24 Jun 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 471
Abstract
Understanding nonlinear fluid flow in fractured rocks is critical for various geoengineering and geosciences. This study investigates the evolution of seepage behavior under varying fracture surface roughness, confining pressures, and shear displacements. A total of four sandstone fracture specimens were prepared using controlled [...] Read more.
Understanding nonlinear fluid flow in fractured rocks is critical for various geoengineering and geosciences. This study investigates the evolution of seepage behavior under varying fracture surface roughness, confining pressures, and shear displacements. A total of four sandstone fracture specimens were prepared using controlled splitting techniques, with surface morphology quantified by Joint Roughness Coefficient (JRC) values ranging from 2.8 to 17.7. Triaxial seepage tests were conducted under four confining pressures (3–9 MPa) and four shear displacements (0–1.5 mm). Experimental results reveal that permeability remains stable under low hydraulic gradients but transitions to nonlinear regimes as the flow rate increases, accompanied by significant energy loss and deviation from the cubic law. The onset of nonlinearity occurs earlier with higher roughness, stress, and displacement. A critical hydraulic gradient Jc was introduced to define the threshold at which inertial effects dominate. Forchheimer’s equation was employed to model nonlinear flow, and empirical regression models were developed to predict coefficients A, B, and Jc using hydraulic aperture and JRC as input variables. These models demonstrated high accuracy (R2 > 0.92). This work provides theoretical insights and predictive approaches for assessing nonlinear fluid transport in rock fracture. Future research will address mechanical–hydraulic coupling and incorporate additional factors such as scale effects and flow anisotropy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Developments in Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR) Processes)
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18 pages, 4203 KB  
Article
Long-Term Anisotropic Mechanical Characterization of Layered Shale—An Experimental Study for the BaoKang Tunnel of the Zhengwan Railway, China
by Jun Zhao, Changming Li and Wei Huang
Processes 2025, 13(6), 1900; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13061900 - 16 Jun 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 548
Abstract
With the further implementation and development of the Western Development Strategy, studying the mechanical behavior and deformation characteristics of deep-buried tunnels in layered hard rock under high ground stress conditions holds considerable engineering significance. To study the mechanical properties and long-term deformation and [...] Read more.
With the further implementation and development of the Western Development Strategy, studying the mechanical behavior and deformation characteristics of deep-buried tunnels in layered hard rock under high ground stress conditions holds considerable engineering significance. To study the mechanical properties and long-term deformation and failure characteristics of different bedding stratified rocks, this research employed an MTS815 electro-hydraulic servo rock testing system and a French TOP rheometer. Triaxial compression tests, rheological property tests, and long-term cyclic and unloading tests were conducted on shale samples under varying confining pressures and bedding angles. The results indicate that (1) under triaxial compression, shale demonstrates pronounced anisotropic behavior. When the confining pressure is constant, the peak strength of the rock sample exhibits a “U”-shaped variation with the bedding angle (its minimum value at 60°). For a fixed bedding angle, the peak strength of the rock sample progressively increases as the confining pressure rises. (2) The mode of shale failure varies with the angle: at 0°, shale exhibits conjugate shear failure; at 30°, shear slip failure along the bedding is controlled by the bedding weak plane; at 60° and 90°, failure occurs through the bedding. (3) During the creep process of layered shale, brittle failure characteristics are evident, with microcracks within the sample gradually failing at stress concentration points. The decelerated and stable creep stages are prominent; while the accelerated creep stage is less noticeable, the creep rate increases with increasing stress level. (4) Under low confining pressure, the peak strength during cyclic loading and unloading creep processes is lower than that of conventional triaxial tests when the bedding plane dip angles are 0° and 30°, which is the opposite at 60° and 90°. (5) In the cyclic loading and unloading process, Poisson’s ratio gradually increases, whereas the elastic modulus, shear modulus, and bulk modulus gradually decrease. Full article
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21 pages, 2074 KB  
Article
Influence of Clay Content on the Compaction and Permeability Characteristics of Sandstone Reservoirs
by Jin Pang, Tongtong Wu, Chunxi Zhou, Haotian Chen, Jiaao Gao and Xinan Yu
Processes 2025, 13(6), 1835; https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13061835 - 10 Jun 2025
Viewed by 743
Abstract
Clay content is a critical geological parameter influencing the pore structure, compaction sensitivity, and flow capacity of sandstone reservoirs. In this study, representative Tertiary sandstones from a major sedimentary basin in western China were selected, covering natural and synthetic core samples with clay [...] Read more.
Clay content is a critical geological parameter influencing the pore structure, compaction sensitivity, and flow capacity of sandstone reservoirs. In this study, representative Tertiary sandstones from a major sedimentary basin in western China were selected, covering natural and synthetic core samples with clay contents ranging from 20% to 70%. Utilizing a self-developed apparatus capable of both static and dynamic compaction experiments, we systematically performed staged static loading and gas–water two-phase displacement tests. This enabled us to obtain comprehensive datasets on porosity, permeability, pressure response, and two-phase flow characteristics under various clay content, confining pressure, and gas drive rate conditions. Results demonstrate that high clay content leads to pronounced pore structure compaction and substantially greater permeability reductions compared to low-clay reservoirs, indicating heightened stress sensitivity. The synergy between gas drive rate and confining pressure regulates intralayer water production efficiency: initially, increased gas drive enhances mobile water production, but efficiency drops sharply at late stages due to pore contraction and increased bound water. As confining pressure increases, the mixed-flow region for two-phase flow shrinks, with water permeability decreasing sharply and gas permeability increasing, revealing the dynamic fluid transport and productivity decline mechanisms controlled by effective stress. The research deepens understanding of compaction–flow mechanisms in clay-rich sandstones, offering bases for evaluating reservoir stress sensitivity and supporting efficient, sustainable gas reservoir development, which increasingly helps offset global energy shortages. Full article
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27 pages, 12274 KB  
Article
Mechanical Properties and Microstructure Damage of Limestone Concrete Under Triaxial Stress
by Kaide Liu, Songxin Zhao, Dingbo Wang, Wenping Yue, Chaowei Sun, Yu Xia and Qiyu Wang
Buildings 2025, 15(11), 1924; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15111924 - 2 Jun 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 668
Abstract
This study takes limestone crushed stone concrete as the research object and systematically investigates its mechanical property changes and microstructural damage characteristics under different confining pressures using triaxial compression tests, scanning electron microscope (SEM) tests, and digital image processing techniques. The results show [...] Read more.
This study takes limestone crushed stone concrete as the research object and systematically investigates its mechanical property changes and microstructural damage characteristics under different confining pressures using triaxial compression tests, scanning electron microscope (SEM) tests, and digital image processing techniques. The results show that, in terms of macro-mechanical properties, as the confining pressure increases, the peak strength increases by 192.66%, the axial peak strain increases by 143.66%, the elastic modulus increases by 133.98%, and the ductility coefficient increases by 54.61%. In terms of microstructure, the porosity decreases by 64.35%, the maximum pore diameter decreases by 75.69%, the fractal dimension decreases by 19.56%, and the interfacial transition zone cracks gradually extend into the aggregate interior. The optimization of the microstructure makes the concrete more compact, reduces stress concentration, and thereby enhances the macro-mechanical properties. Additionally, the failure characteristics of the specimens shift from diagonal shear failure to compressive flow failure. According to the Mohr–Coulomb strength criterion, the calculated cohesion is 6.96 MPa, the internal friction angle is 38.89°, and the breakage angle is 25.53°. A regression analysis established a quantitative relationship between microstructural characteristics and macro-mechanical properties, revealing the significant impact of microstructural characteristics on macro-mechanical properties. Under low confining pressure, early volumetric expansion and rapid volumetric strain occur, with microcracks mainly concentrated at the aggregate interface that are relatively wide. Under high confining pressure, volumetric expansion is delayed, volumetric strain increases slowly, and microcracks extend into the interior of the aggregate, becoming finer and more dispersed. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advanced Research on Concrete Materials in Construction)
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