Deterioration of concrete joints under low-intensity, high-cycle loading
journal contribution
posted on 2014-06-20, 10:58authored bySimon Austin, Stuart J. Arnold, Paul FlemingPaul Fleming, Peter Robins
This paper reports on the results from a series of laboratory tests assessing the rate of deterioration for concrete cracks and joints under low-intensity, high-cycle loading, typical of that found in industrial flooring, external hardstandings and rigid pavements. The testing incorporated a variety of crack geometries, reinforcement types, reinforcement quantities and load magnitudes for over 80 half-scale prism specimens. The data presented demonstrates that joint/crack failure contains four distinct phases of deterioration, each controlled by a different mechanism of material degradation. ‘V'-shaped cracks were found to produce a higher load transfer than the equivalent surface width parallel crack, with the incorporation of A142 fabric and steel fibres significantly reducing differential displacement and crack face deterioration. The data has enabled serviceability limits to be established for each of the material parameters tested, keeping differential displacement within acceptable levels and preventing the onset of failure.
History
School
Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering
Published in
MAGAZINE OF CONCRETE RESEARCH
Volume
61
Issue
9
Pages
679 - 690 (12)
Citation
AUSTIN, S. ... et al., 2009. Deterioration of concrete joints under low-intensity, high-cycle loading. Magazine of Concrete Research, 61 (9), pp. 679 - 690.