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Quantifying Void Ratio Variation in Sand Using Computed Tomography
13
Citations
13
References
2000
Year
Unknown Venue
Rock TestingEngineeringMechanical EngineeringCt ScansResidual StressSand SpecimensGeotechnical EngineeringStressstrain AnalysisDeformation ModelingVoid Ratio VariationStrain LocalizationMicrogravity EnvironmentEngineering GeologySedimentologyAerospace EngineeringGeotechnical PropertyDepositional ProcessCivil EngineeringGeomechanicsMechanics Of Materials
A series of displacement-controlled, conventional, drained axisymmetric (triaxial) experiments were conducted on dry Ottawa sand specimens at very low effective confining stresses in a microgravity environment aboard the Space Shuttle during the NASA STS-89 mission. Post-flight analysis included studying the internal fabric and failure patterns of these specimens using Computed Tomography (CT). The CT scans of three specimens subjected to different compression levels (uncompressed specimen, a specimen compressed to 3.3% nominal axial strain (εa), and a specimen compressed to 25% &eh;a) are presented to investigate the evolution of instability patterns and to quantify void ratio variation. The progress of failure is described and discussed. Also, specimens' densities were calibrated using standard ASTM procedures and void ratio spatial variation was calculated and represented by contour maps and histograms. The CT technique demonstrated good ability to detect specimen inhomogeneities, localization patterns, and quantifying void ratio variation within sand specimens.
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