Underground engineering in extreme environments necessitates understanding rock mechanical behavior under coupled high-temperature and dynamic loading conditions.This study presents an innovative multi-scale cross-pla...Underground engineering in extreme environments necessitates understanding rock mechanical behavior under coupled high-temperature and dynamic loading conditions.This study presents an innovative multi-scale cross-platform PFC-FDEM coupling methodology that bridges microscopic thermal damage mechanisms with macroscopic dynamic fracture responses.The breakthrough coupling framework introduces:(1)bidirectional information transfer protocols enabling seamless integration between PFC’s particle-scale thermal damage characterization and FDEM’s continuum-scale fracture propagation,(2)multi-physics mapping algorithms that preserve crack network geometric invariants during scale transitions,and(3)cross-platform cohesive zone implementations for accurate SHTB dynamic loading simulation.The coupled approach reveals distinct three-stage crack evolution characteristics with temperature-dependent density following an exponential model.High-temperature exposure significantly reduces dynamic strength ratio(60%at 800℃)and diminishes strain-rate sensitivity,with dynamic increase factor decreasing from 1.0 to 2.2(25℃)to 1.0-1.3(800℃).Critically,the coupling methodology captures fundamental energy redistribution mechanisms:thermal crack networks alter elastic energy proportion from 75%to 35%while increasing fracture energy from 5%to 30%.Numerical predictions demonstrate excellent experimental agreement(±8%peak stress-strain errors),validating the PFC-FDEM coupling accuracy.This integrated framework provides essential computational tools for predicting complex thermal-mechanical rock behavior in underground engineering applications.展开更多
基金supported by the National Natural Science Foundations of China(Nos.12272411 and 42007259)the State Key Laboratory for GeoMechanics and Deep Underground Engineering,the China University of Mining&Technology(No.SKLGDUEK2207)the Department of Science and Technology of Shaanxi Province(Nos.2022KXJ-107 and 2022JC-LHJJ-16).
文摘Underground engineering in extreme environments necessitates understanding rock mechanical behavior under coupled high-temperature and dynamic loading conditions.This study presents an innovative multi-scale cross-platform PFC-FDEM coupling methodology that bridges microscopic thermal damage mechanisms with macroscopic dynamic fracture responses.The breakthrough coupling framework introduces:(1)bidirectional information transfer protocols enabling seamless integration between PFC’s particle-scale thermal damage characterization and FDEM’s continuum-scale fracture propagation,(2)multi-physics mapping algorithms that preserve crack network geometric invariants during scale transitions,and(3)cross-platform cohesive zone implementations for accurate SHTB dynamic loading simulation.The coupled approach reveals distinct three-stage crack evolution characteristics with temperature-dependent density following an exponential model.High-temperature exposure significantly reduces dynamic strength ratio(60%at 800℃)and diminishes strain-rate sensitivity,with dynamic increase factor decreasing from 1.0 to 2.2(25℃)to 1.0-1.3(800℃).Critically,the coupling methodology captures fundamental energy redistribution mechanisms:thermal crack networks alter elastic energy proportion from 75%to 35%while increasing fracture energy from 5%to 30%.Numerical predictions demonstrate excellent experimental agreement(±8%peak stress-strain errors),validating the PFC-FDEM coupling accuracy.This integrated framework provides essential computational tools for predicting complex thermal-mechanical rock behavior in underground engineering applications.