3 research outputs found

    Recent progress in microplane modelling of plain concrete

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    Despite determined efforts in mathematical modelling of multiaxial behaviour of plain concrete by many researchers, the existing models have not achieved a full description of this complex behaviour. Among these models, the microplane models have contributed important advances in the semi-multiscale modelling of multiaxial behaviour of concrete since their inception in the early 80s. Among several versions of microplane models for plain concrete, model M4 had the greatest success in modelling both the rate-dependent dynamic and quasistatic multiaxial behaviours of concrete. Yet, some problems still have persisted, such as (1) a spurious lateral contraction under uniaxial tension, and (2) an unrealistic damage prediction in tension. These problems resulted from the difficulty in reconciling the pressure sensitive ductile behaviour in compression of concrete with its brittle tensile behaviour. A new microplane model, called M7 as a successor to the earlier microplane models for plain concrete, overcomes the aforementioned problems while retaining all of its compressive data fitting prowess. The volumetric-deviatoric split, required in the previous modelling of the pressure sensitive compressive behaviour of concrete, is now removed from the elastic strains under both compression and tension, but retained in the formulation of compressive stress-strain boundaries (i.e, strain-dependent yield limits on the generic microplane). This allows the simulation of a much more realistic tensile behaviour including the correct damage (loading/unloading slope) and correct lateral contraction. It also means that a new compressive normal boundary is needed. It is defined in terms of the existing deviatoric and volumetric boundaries, which preserves the versatility of the model in fitting a wide range of experimental data. Model M7 has been tested in finite element simulations of a wide range of compressive, tensile, mixed mode fracture tests and vertex effect tests, as well as compression-tension load cycles. It has recently been extended to fiber reinforced concrete and rate dependent behaviour of plain concrete. Perforations of concrete walls by missiles in which enormous strain rates (on the order of 104s−1) are encountered have also been simulated successfully using the rate dependent extension of the model M7, whose robustness is thus demonstrated

    Fracturing in concrete via lattice-particle model

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    Numerical simulation is used to explore the behavior of concrete beams of different sizes and different notch lengths, loaded in three-point bending. The entire range of notch depth is studied. One limit case is type 1 fracture, which occurs when the notch depth is zero and the crack initiates from a smooth surface (this is the case of the modulus of rupture test). Another limit is type 2 fracture, which occurs for deep enough notches. Both cases exhibit very different size effects. The fracture is simulated numerically with a robust mesolevel lattice-particle model. The results shed light on the transitional behavior in which the notch depth is non-zero but not deep enough for developing the the type 2 size effect dominated by energy release from the structure. In agreement with experimental observations and theoretical predictions, the numerical results show evidence of a decreasing macroscopic fracture energy as the ligament gets very short
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