Rock and soil are the major constituent materials of the lithosphere of the earth. They are also the most widely used engineering materials. Rock and soil exhibit some remarkable characteristics of deformation and strength behavior, such as the pressure sensitivity(or pressure dependency), shear dilatancy, dependency of stress path etc. The two phenomena of pressure sensitivity and shear dilatancy have long been known by people. However, their origin of generation is not explained rationally yet.
作者簡介
暫缺《巖土材料質(zhì)量分布與變形之間的相互作用原理(第2版)》作者簡介
圖書目錄
Preface to the second edition Preface to the first edition Chapter 1 Introduction to Continuum Mechanics 1.1 The definition of a continuum 1.2 Deformation 1.3 Stress 1.4 Velocity fields 1.5 The classical conservation laws and field equations 1.5.1 Lagrange and Euler descriptions of the motion of a continuum 1.5.2 The equation of continuity 1.5.3 The equations of motion 1.5.4 Moment of momentum Chapter 2 Fundamentals of Thermodynamics 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Basic concepts of thermodynamics 2.3 Temperature and the zeroth law of thermodynamics 2.4 Energy 2.5 The first law of thermodynamics 2.6 The second law of thermodynamics 2.7 Reversible and irreversible processes 2.8 Entropy and Clausius-Duhem inequality 2.9 Internal variables and accompanying equilibrium state Chapter 3 Fundamental Characteristics of Deformation Behavior for Geotechnical Materials 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Pressure sensitivity 3.3 Shear dilatancy 3.4 Dependency of stress path Chapter 4 Constitutive Modeling for Geotechnical Materials 4.1 Introduction 4.2 The plastic potential theory 4.3 The approach based on the thermodynamics of irreversible processes 4.4 The critical state and critical state line 4.4.1 Critical state 4.4.2 Critical state line Chapter 5 The Principle of Interaction between Plastic Volumetric and Shear Strains 5.1 Background 5.2 The principle of interaction between plastic volumetric and shear strains 5.3 Effects of the plastic shear strain on plastic volumetric strains 5.4 Effects of the plastic volumetric strain on plastic shear strains 5.5 The physical meaning of the principle of interaction Chapter 6 Symmetry and Interaction between Plastic Volumetric and Shear Strain Fields 6.1 Introduction to the gauge field theory 6.2 Symmetries of plastic strain fields 6.2.1 Introduction to transformation groups 6.2.2 The local symmetries of plastic strain fields and constitutive field equations 6.3 Characteristics of the interaction between mass distribution and deformation 6.4 Summary Chapter 7 The Mechanism of Generation of Dependency of Stress Path and Critical State Line 7.1 The dependency of stress path 7.2 The curvature hardening 7.3 The critical state line Chapter 8 The Constitutive Equations for Geotechnical Materials 8.1 The objective of constitutive modeling 8.2 Quantitative representation of the interaction between plastic volumetric and shear strains 8.3 Thermodynamic variables and state potential 8.4 Dissipation functional 8.5 The constitutive equations for geotechnical materials Chapter 9 Damages of Engineering and Geotechnical Materials 9.1 The mechanism of damage of metals and some engineering materials 9.2 The damage of geotechnical materials 9.3 The description of damage evolution Chapter 10 The Numerical Method of Constitutive Modeling for Geoteehnical Materials 10.1 Introduction 10.2 The numerical method of constitutive modeling 10.3 Plasticity-based models for clay and sand under different stress paths 10.4 Concluding remarks Chapter 11 The Interaction between Mass Distribution and Deformation in Unsaturated Soils 11.1 Introduction 11.2 The interaction between plastic volumetric and shear strains in unsaturated soils 11.3 The dual property of matric suction 11.4 The shear strength of unsaturated soils 11.5 The constitutive field equations for unsaturated soils 11.6 The dependency of stress path and critical state line in unsaturated soils References Index