On borehole indentor (BHI) measurements and analysis

In situ measurements on stress–indentation curves conducted with the National Research Council (NRC), Canada and the Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute (ARRI), Russia borehole indentors (BHI) are analyzed and classified. This establishes harmony with laboratory observations on stress–strain dia...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Cold Regions Science and Technology
Main Authors: Sinha, Nirmal K., Shkhinek, Karl, Smirnov, Victor
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.coldregions.2012.01.009
https://nrc-publications.canada.ca/eng/view/object/?id=03cf1b46-14b8-47de-a649-fc4ea23d54bd
https://nrc-publications.canada.ca/fra/voir/objet/?id=03cf1b46-14b8-47de-a649-fc4ea23d54bd
Description
Summary:In situ measurements on stress–indentation curves conducted with the National Research Council (NRC), Canada and the Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute (ARRI), Russia borehole indentors (BHI) are analyzed and classified. This establishes harmony with laboratory observations on stress–strain diagrams and some compatibility with the recommendations (ISO/DIS 19906) on estimating uniaxial ice strengths from BHI strengths. The analysis is devoted mainly to consider the influence of local ice conditions and the indentation rates on the pressure–indentation curves. Simultaneous records of the acoustic emission (AE) detected by accelerometers installed on the ice surface, within 1.5 m of the indentation plate, indicated that major cracks are nucleated at the ice/plate interface. Microstructural analysis of the indented ice confirmed this important conclusion in addition to revealing recrystallization as well as healing activities in the indented ice. An attempt, with extremely limited success, has been made in applying conventional ice failure criteria for predicting the observed stress–indentation curves. Phenomenologically, however, a power-law between the indentation-rate and upper-yield strength exhibits the same rate sensitivity (about 3) usually obtained for strain-rate dependence of uniaxial strengths. Numerical solutions of the rate-sensitive indentation processes must be developed (as has successfully been achieved for uniaxial tests) on microstructure-property based mathematical (rheological) model that includes the effects of the rate-dependent kinetics of deformation, microcracking and crack-enhanced creep. Premature brittle fractures are contact problems and modeling must consider the nucleation of cracks in ice at the ice/plate contact surface. Peer reviewed: Yes NRC publication: Yes