Understanding the behavior of concrete and mortar at very high strain rates is of critical importance in a range of applications. Under highly dynamic conditions, the strain-rate dependence of material response and high levels of hydrostatic pressure cause the material behavior to be significantly d
Dynamic behavior of concrete at high strain rates and pressures: II. numerical simulation
β Scribed by S.W. Park; Q. Xia; M. Zhou
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1005 KB
- Volume
- 25
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0734-743X
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β¦ Synopsis
The response of concrete and mortar under high-strain-rate impact loading are analyzed using fully dynamic finite element simulations. The analyses concern the load-carrying capacity, energy absorbency and the effect of the microstructure. The simulations focus on the plate impact configuration used in the experimental part of this research, allowing for direct comparison of model predictions with experimental measurements. A micromechanical model is formulated and used, accounting for the two-phase composite microstructure of concrete. Arbitrary microstructural phase morphologies of actual concrete used in impact experiments are digitized and explicitly considered in the numerical models. The behavior of the two constituent phases in the concrete are characterized by an extended Drucker-Prager model that accounts for pressure-dependence, rate-sensitivity, and strain hardening/softening. Model parameters are determined by independent impact experiments on mortar and through a parametric study in which the prediction of numerical simulations is matched with measurements from experiments on concrete and mortar. Calculations show that significant inelastic deformations occur in the mortar matrix under the impact conditions analyzed and relatively smaller inelastic strains are seen in the aggregates. The influence of aggregate volume fraction on the dynamic load-carrying capacity of concrete is explored. The strength increases with aggregate volume fraction and an enhancement of approximately 30% over that of mortar is found for an aggregate volume fraction of 42%. Numerical simulations also show increasing energy absorbency with increasing aggregate volume fraction and provide a time-resolved characterization for the history of work dissipation as the deformation progresses.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This work deals with response modeling of concrete for dynamic loading. As in statics one has to account for substantial difference of inelastic response in tension and compression, the anisotropy of the response induced by complex cracking patterns and the need of irreversible deformation due to fr