Influence of Freeze-Thaw Cycles and Sustained Load on the Durability and Bearing Capacity of Reinforced Concrete Columns.

Materials (Basel)

Ruicheng Construction Engineering Co., Ltd., Lianyungang 222042, China.

Published: December 2024

The deterioration of concrete structures is mainly due to the combined action of the environment and external load. In this study, 32 reinforced concrete columns were prepared to evaluate the coupling actions on the properties of reinforced concrete structures. The durability, bearing capacity, and failure mode of reinforced concrete columns were investigated under the combined action of freeze-thaw (F-T) cycles, sustained load, and salt corrosion (water or composite salt solution). Results show that the mass fluctuation of reinforced concrete columns under a sustained load was more obvious during F-T cycles. During the early F-T cycles, the sustained load was beneficial to the F-T resistance of the reinforced concrete columns. With the increase in F-T cycles, the damage to the columns with a sustained load gradually aggravated. In the composite salt solution, the damage to the reinforced concrete columns was postponed, and its durability showed a two-stage evolution. After 100 F-T cycles, the mass loss and relative dynamic modulus of elasticity (RDME) deterioration of the columns with a sustained load sped up significantly. The combined action of salt corrosion, load, and F-T cycles has the most significant influence on the bearing capacity, stiffness deterioration, and crack development of reinforced concrete columns.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma17246129DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

reinforced concrete
32
concrete columns
28
sustained load
24
f-t cycles
24
cycles sustained
12
bearing capacity
12
combined action
12
columns sustained
12
concrete
9
columns
9

Similar Publications

One of the most critical components of reinforced concrete structures are beam-column joint systems, which greatly affect the overall behavior of a structure during a major seismic event. According to modern design codes, if the system fails, it should fail due to the flexural yielding of the beam and not due to the shear failure of the joint. Thus, a reliable tool is required for the prediction of the failure mode of the joints in a preexisting population of structures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Two identically sized RC beams were fabricated to investigate the effects of explosive loads on the flexural behaviour of Reinforced Concrete (RC) beams. One of the beams was subjected to an explosive load to induce post-explosion damage, and subsequently, both beams underwent flexural capacity testing. Integrating piezoelectric smart aggregates (SAas) within the beams facilitated continuous observation of the damage conditions, allowing for the assessment of internal concrete deterioration from explosive impacts to bending failures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Given the current construction waste accumulation problem, to utilize the resource of red brick solid waste, construction waste red brick was used as a concrete coarse aggregate combined with polypropylene fiber to prepare PPF (polypropylene fiber)-reinforced recycled brick aggregate concrete. Through a cube compression test, axial compression test, and four-point bending test of 15 groups of specimens, the influences of the aggregate replacement rate of recycled brick and the PPF volume on the mechanical properties of recycled brick aggregate concrete reinforced by PPF were studied, and a strength parameter calculation formula was constructed and modified based on the above. Finally, combined with a life cycle assessment (LCA), the carbon emissions of raw materials were analyzed and evaluated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The glass fiber-reinforced polymer (GFRP) materials of wind turbine blades can be recovered and recycled by crushing, thereby solving one of the most perplexing problems facing the wind energy sector. This process yields selectively crushed wind turbine blade (SCWTB), a novel waste that is almost exclusively composed of GFRP composite fibers that can be revalued in terms of their use as a raw material in concrete production. In this research, the fresh and mechanical performance of concrete made with 1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Industrial and construction wastes make up about half of all world wastes. In order to reduce their negative impact on the environment, it is possible to use part of them for concrete production. Using experimental-statistical modeling techniques, the combined effect of brick powder, recycling sand, and alkaline activator on fresh and hardened properties of self-compacting concrete for the production of textile-reinforced concrete was investigated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!