Publications
Enhancements to the Munson-Dawson Model for Rock Salt
The Munson-Dawson (MD) constitutive model was originally developed in the 1980's to predict the thermomechanical behavior of rock salt. Since then, it has been used to simulate the evolution of the underground in nuclear waste repositories, mines, and storage caverns for gases and liquids. This report covers three enhancements to the MD model. (1) New transient and steady-state rate terms were added to capture salt's creep behavior at low equivalent stresses (below about 8 MPa). These new terms were calibrated against a series of triaxial compression creep experiments on salt from the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant. (2) The equivalent stress measure was changed from the Tresca stress to the Hosford stress. By varying a single exponent, the Hosford stress can reduce to the Tresca stress, the von Mises stress, or a range of behaviors in-between. This exponent was calibrated against true triaxial compression experiments on salt hollow cylinders. (3) The MD model's numerical implementation was overhauled, adding a line search algorithm to the implicit solution scheme. The new implementation was verified against analytical solutions, and benchmarked against a pre-existing implementation on a room closure simulation. The new implementation pre- dicted virtually identical room closure, yet sped up the simulation by 16x . (The source code of the new implementation is included in an appendix of this report.)