Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
771561 Engineering Fracture Mechanics 2008 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

In cement-based materials the full range from brittle to ductile fracture can be achieved by changing the material structure, the loading conditions, the specimen size and/or the boundary conditions. Considering just the material, at one side of the spectrum hardened cement paste behaves brittle, whereas at the other side, new fibre reinforced cements may behave ductile. Structural conditions affect the brittleness/ductility as well, and by simply changing the loading (uniaxial tension, uniaxial and confined compression, etc.), the specimen/structure size or by changing the boundary conditions the full range from brittle to ductile response can be observed. Basically there is no difference in behaviour between the various loading cases and the same four-stage fracture process can always be identified. The four ‘universal’ stages are the linear elastic regime, the microcrack regime (before the maximum load is reached), the macrocrack regime (viz. the first, usually steep part of the softening curve), and the bridging stage. Microcracks are defined as cracks that can be arrested by elements in the material structure, whereas macrocracks can only be delayed/ arrested by means or structural measures at a larger scale than the material structure. In this paper it is tried to develop a unified view on fracture of materials belonging to this broad class, which may be seen as conceptual framework for an all encompassing fracture model for cementitious materials.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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