The creep of potash rock from New Brunswick

The laboratory investigation on which this thesis is based has involved over 6 creep-years of experiments using potash rock from New Brunswick, Canada. The experimental programme consisted of two parts: incremented-stress creep tests designed to determine creep strain and creep strain rates, and a s...

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Main Author: Yin, Fei
Format: Others
Language:en
en_US
Published: 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1519
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.anitoba.ca-dspace#1993-15192013-01-11T13:29:05ZYin, Fei2007-05-17T12:39:12Z2007-05-17T12:39:12Z1998-09-01T00:00:00Zhttp://hdl.handle.net/1993/1519The laboratory investigation on which this thesis is based has involved over 6 creep-years of experiments using potash rock from New Brunswick, Canada. The experimental programme consisted of two parts: incremented-stress creep tests designed to determine creep strain and creep strain rates, and a series of tests in which the sensitivity of creep as a function of stress history was explored. The duration of tests was between 7 and 298 days, with most tests lasting about three months. The experiments have demonstrated that potash deformation is highly time-dependent even at a stress as low as 2 MPa. In the absence of steady-state creep, the creep rate is never constant in being a function of time. The stress-dependence of the creep rate was established at a number of time intervals in the form of a power function. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)1006514 bytes184 bytesapplication/pdftext/plainenen_USThe creep of potash rock from New BrunswickCivil EngineeringM.Sc.
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language en
en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
description The laboratory investigation on which this thesis is based has involved over 6 creep-years of experiments using potash rock from New Brunswick, Canada. The experimental programme consisted of two parts: incremented-stress creep tests designed to determine creep strain and creep strain rates, and a series of tests in which the sensitivity of creep as a function of stress history was explored. The duration of tests was between 7 and 298 days, with most tests lasting about three months. The experiments have demonstrated that potash deformation is highly time-dependent even at a stress as low as 2 MPa. In the absence of steady-state creep, the creep rate is never constant in being a function of time. The stress-dependence of the creep rate was established at a number of time intervals in the form of a power function. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
author Yin, Fei
spellingShingle Yin, Fei
The creep of potash rock from New Brunswick
author_facet Yin, Fei
author_sort Yin, Fei
title The creep of potash rock from New Brunswick
title_short The creep of potash rock from New Brunswick
title_full The creep of potash rock from New Brunswick
title_fullStr The creep of potash rock from New Brunswick
title_full_unstemmed The creep of potash rock from New Brunswick
title_sort creep of potash rock from new brunswick
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1519
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