Combined meso-scale modeling and experimental investigation of the effect of mechanical damage on the transport properties of cementitious composites |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Materials Science and Engineering, Shandong Jianzhu University, Jinan 250101, PR China;2. Beijing Aeronautical Manufacturing Technology Research Institute, Beijing 100024, PR China;1. College of Science, Qilu University of Technology, Jinan 250353, China;2. School of Mathematical Sciences, Shandong Normal University, Jinan 250014, China;1. Léonard de Vinci Pôle universitaire, DVRC, 92916 Paris la Défense Cedex, France;2. University Professor of Mathematics emeritus, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA, United States |
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Abstract: | The transport properties of cementitious composites such as concrete are important indicators of their durability, and are known to be heavily influenced by mechanical loading. In the current work, we use meso-scale hygro-mechanical modeling with a morphological 3D two phase mortar-aggregate model, in conjunction with experimentally obtained properties, to investigate the coupling between mechanical loading and damage and the permeability of the composite. The increase in permeability of a cylindrical test specimen at 28% aggregate fraction during a uniaxial displacement-controlled compression test at 85% of the peak load was measured using a gas permeameter. The mortar's mechanical behavior is assumed to follow the well-known compression damaged plasticity (CDP) model with isotropic damage, at varying thresholds, and obtained from different envelope curves. The damaged intrinsic permeability of the mortar evolves according to a logarithmic matching law with progressive loading. We fit the matching law parameters to the experimental result for the test specimen by inverse identification using our meso-scale model. We then subject a series of virtual composite specimens to quasi-static uniaxial compressive loading with varying boundary conditions to obtain the simulated damage and strain evolutions, and use the damage data and the previously identified parameters to determine the evolution of the macroscopic permeability tensor for the specimens, using a network model. We conduct a full parameter study by varying aggregate volume fraction, granulometric distribution, loading/boundary conditions and “matching law” parameters, as well as for different strain–damage thresholds and uniaxial loading envelope curves. Based on this study, we propose Avrami equation-based upper and lower bounds for the evolution of the damaged permeability of the composite. |
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Keywords: | D. Fracture D. Mechanical properties D. Microstructure D. Physical properties |
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