Stress-Strain Relationship of Frost-Damaged Concrete Subjected to Fatigue Loading
- 1 January 2008
- journal article
- Published by American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE) in Journal of Materials in Civil Engineering
- Vol. 20 (1), 37-45
- https://doi.org/10.1061/(asce)0899-1561(2008)20:1(37)
Abstract
This study attempted to develop a model for the stress-strain relationship in compression of frost-damaged concrete subjected to fatigue loading. Concrete specimens were prepared and exposed to freeze-thaw cycles followed by application of static and fatigue loading. The strains induced during the freeze-thaw test were carefully measured as well as during a mechanical loading test. It was found that the static strength and the fatigue life of concrete decreases as increasing irreversible tensile strain was induced by frost action. A stress-strain model for frost-damaged concrete under application of static and fatigue loading based on the degradation of initial stiffness caused by frost damage was presented. The degradation of initial stiffness for damaged concrete was empirically formulated as a function of remaining expansion caused by freeze-thaw cycles. The plastic strain under the application of mechanical static and fatigue loading for frost-damaged concrete is higher than that for original concrete...Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Direct Path-Integral Scheme for Fatigue Simulation of Reinforced Concrete in ShearJournal of Advanced Concrete Technology, 2006
- Stress-Strain Model of Concrete Damaged by Freezing and Thawing CyclesJournal of Advanced Concrete Technology, 2004
- Concrete in Biaxial Cyclic CompressionJournal of Structural Engineering, 1984
- Hysteretic Fracturing Endochronic Theory for ConcreteJournal of the Engineering Mechanics Division, 1980
- Plastic-Fracturing Theory for ConcreteJournal of the Engineering Mechanics Division, 1979
- Behavior of Concrete Under Compressive LoadingsJournal of the Structural Division, 1969