Insight into the Evolutionary Mechanism of the Rear Fissure of Landslides That Conform to the Three-Section Mechanism
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Rear Fissure in a Typical Landslide
3. Base Friction Testing for Landslide Fissure Extension
3.1. Sample Preparation
3.2. Testing Scheme
- (I)
- According to the material ratio listed in Table 1, two different materials were determined and stirred evenly;
- (II)
- The testing model slope was constructed on the belt of the base friction tester according to the schematic design of the base friction model shown in Figure 2; then, preconsolidation was completed;
- (III)
- After the reasonable arrangement of the light supplement equipment, the PIV high-speed camera (Figure 2c,d) was arranged at a suitable height above the slope model and connected to the computer control system. The camera was configured with a sample interval of 30 frames per second;
- (IV)
- The conveyor belt began to rotate to render model deformation stable for more than 1 min, along with PIV measurement;
- (V)
- Belt rotation was suspended to excavate the first section of the top fissure (Section I in Figure 2b, labeled by a red dashed line), with a length of 20 mm and a width of about 1.5 mm, and the conveyor belt began to rotate to render model deformation stable for more than 1 min, along with PIV measurement;
- (VI)
- In order to create a fissure with a total depth of 60 mm and a width of roughly 1.5 mm, conveyor belt rotation was stopped in order to excavate the second section of the fissure (Section II in Figure 2b, labeled by a red dashed line). After that, the belt resumed rotating to make the model deformation stable for more than a minute, accompanied by PIV measurements;
- (VII)
- Repeating the operations outlined in steps (V) and (VI), the slope models with a fissure with a total depth of 100/140/180/220 mm were loaded and measured on the conveyor belt of the base friction tester. It is noted that visible damage on both sides of the fissure was prohibited during fissure excavation; thus, a thin and pointed tool, e.g., a toothpick, was recommended in the experiment.
3.3. Experimental Results
- (1)
- Evolution of the displacement field
- (2)
- Evolution of strain fields
4. Evolutionary Mechanism of the Rear Fissure
- Without the rear tension fissure, controlled by the specially sloped structure with a weak interlayer in front, it is inevitable that the rear fissure will initiate in the special position according to displacement differentiation and strain concentration;
- For the rear tension fissure propagation from zero to approximately 0.5 Hcr, with the creep active zone of the front weak interlayer migrating from outside to inside, the traction action, especially for the fissure tip, is gradually increased to accelerate rear tension fissure extension, accompanying significant strain concentrations at the tension fissure tip;
- For the rear tension fissure propagation from approximately 0.5 Hcr to nearly Hcr, with an increasing trend of the rear fissure closure, the strain concentration cores, mainly at the half-depth of the tension fissure, gradually diverge from the tension fissure tip, resulting in a reduction in the propagation drive of the rear tension fissure;
- With a tension fissure of nearly Hcr and a rotation trend of the slope body, the rear tension fissure tip is dominated by compression–shear stresses, portending the upcoming shear failure of the locking section along a circular-arc fracture path.
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
- (1)
- Through displacement differentiation and strain concentration controlled by the front weak interlayer, the rear tension fissure is inevitable; therefore, we recommend consideration of in the stability evaluation of landslides that conform to the three-section mechanism;
- (2)
- For the rear tension fissure propagation from zero to nearly Hcr, controlled by the migration of displacement differentiation and strain concentration, the driving effect undergoes acceleration, then deceleration, roughly bounded by the half critical tension fissure at the slope rear;
- (3)
- The trend of rear tension fissure closure may originate from a tension fissure depth of approximately Hcr/2, which is not a sufficient condition for landslide occurrence, which may result in misreporting of precursor information with respect to early warning of locked landslides that conform to the three-section mechanism.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Slope Part | Material Ratio (Mass Ratio) | γ (kN/m3) | c (kPa) | φ (°) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Main mass | Barite:quartz sand:paraffin oil = 32:16:7 | 24.0 | 29.2 | 33.9 |
Weak interlayer | Bentonite:barite:quartz sand:water = 10:3:2:5 | 18.0 | 0.76 | 18.6 |
Test Aim | Exploring the Evolutionary Mechanism of the Rear Fissure in a Kind of Landslide | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Basic | Triggers | Gravity-like force | Container | Model type | Two-dimensional |
Force action | Base friction | Model size | Length: 543 mm; width: 520 mm; thickness: 5 mm | ||
Landslide Classification | Potential Rockslide | Preparation | Compaction | ||
Slope model | Tension fissure | Man-made | Monitor tool | PIV system | Displacements of various marker points dispersed automatically |
Material (Main mass) | 58% barite, 29% quartz sand, 13% paraffin oil. | Test | Prototype | Potential landslide named deformation body II | |
Material (Weak interlayer) | 50% bentonite, 15% barite, 10% quartz sand, 25% water. | Condition | Test variable | Different fissure length | |
Important results | |||||
① | The rear tension fissure has an inevitability to initiate controlled by the specially slope structures and the three-section mechanism of potential landslides. | ||||
② | For the rear tension fissure propagation from zero to nearly Hcr, the driving effect of tension fissure propagation undergoes a process from accelerating to then decelerating, roughly bounded by the half critical tension fissure at the slope rear. |
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Tang, P.; Chen, G.; Qin, S. Insight into the Evolutionary Mechanism of the Rear Fissure of Landslides That Conform to the Three-Section Mechanism. Sustainability 2024, 16, 17. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16010017
Tang P, Chen G, Qin S. Insight into the Evolutionary Mechanism of the Rear Fissure of Landslides That Conform to the Three-Section Mechanism. Sustainability. 2024; 16(1):17. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16010017
Chicago/Turabian StyleTang, Peng, Guoqing Chen, and Siqing Qin. 2024. "Insight into the Evolutionary Mechanism of the Rear Fissure of Landslides That Conform to the Three-Section Mechanism" Sustainability 16, no. 1: 17. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16010017
APA StyleTang, P., Chen, G., & Qin, S. (2024). Insight into the Evolutionary Mechanism of the Rear Fissure of Landslides That Conform to the Three-Section Mechanism. Sustainability, 16(1), 17. https://doi.org/10.3390/su16010017