Abstract
A high-strength concrete subjected to compressive fatigue loading with two maximum stress levels was investigated and the behaviour was evaluated using the macroscopic damage indicators, strain and acoustic emission hits (AE-hits), combined with microstructural analyses utilising light microscopy and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). A clustering technique using Gaussian mixture modelling combined with a posterior probability of 0.80 was firstly applied to the AE-hits caused by compressive fatigue loading, leading to two clusters depending on the maximum stress level. Only a few cracks were visible in the microstructure using light microscopy and SEM, even in phase III of the strain development, which is shortly before failure. However, bluish impregnated areas in the mortar matrix of higher porosity or defects, changing due to the fatigue loading, were analysed. Indications were found that the fatigue damage process is continuously ongoing on a micro-or sub-microscale throughout the mortar matrix, which is difficult to observe on a mesoscale by imaging. Furthermore, the results indicate that two different damage mechanisms take place, which are pronounced depending on the maximum stress level. This might be due to diffuse and widespread compressive damage and localised tensile damage, as the findings documented in the literature suggest.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 5650 |
| Journal | MATERIALS |
| Volume | 14 |
| Issue number | 19 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 28 Sept 2021 |
Keywords
- Acoustic emission
- Compressive cyclic loading
- Damage mechanism
- High-strength concrete
- Light microscopy
- SEM
- Strain development
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Condensed Matter Physics
- General Materials Science
Projects
- 1 Finished
-
Material composition influenced damage development in high-strength concrete under cyclic loading (project in the Priority Programme 2020: Cyclic deterioration of High-Performance Concrete in an experimental-virtual lab)
Oneschkow, N. (Principal Investigator), Löhnert, S. (Principal Investigator) & Timmermann, T. (Project staff)
1 Jun 2017 → 31 Mar 2021
Project: Research
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