Insight into Thermal Stress Distribution and Required Reinforcement Reducing Early-Age Cracking in Mass Foundation Slabs
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Problem Overview
3. Existing Recommendations for Reinforcement Calculation
3.1. General Remarks
3.2. Reinforcement Area and Location
- 1.0 for webs with h ≤ 300 mm or flanges with widths less than 300 mm,
- 0.65 for webs with h ≥ 800 mm or flanges with widths greater than 800 mm;
- intermediate values may be interpolated.
3.3. Cracking Width and Spacing
4. Required Reinforcement Based on the Thermal Strain and Stress Analysis
5. Comparative Study of an Exemplary Slab
5.1. Results from the Simplified Approach
- Based on Eurocode 2, with = 0.65, = 1.0, and = 0.60 m2, the required is equal to 28.11 cm2. Thus, a greater area is obtained.
- Based on Eurocode 2, with = 0.65, = 1.0 and considering the tensile zone covering only the surroundings of the reinforcement (Equation (10)), = 0.17 m2), the required is equal to 7.96 cm2. Thus, a much lower area is obtained.
- Based on DIN EN 1992-1-1 / NA, with = 0.52, = 1.0, and = 0.60 m2, the required is equal to 22.49 cm2. Thus, a similar area is obtained.
- Based on DIN EN 1992-1-1 / NA, with = 0.34 m (Equation (7)) and = 0.34 m2, the required is equal to 24.51 cm2. Thus, a greater area is obtained.
5.2. Results from the Approach Based on CIRIA C766
6. Discussion
- At the top surface, in the heating phase, the induced tensile strain equal to 110 me has been obtained both based on CIRIA C766 and the precise analysis of the strains (Figure 6). This is obvious, since the same restraint factor, R, is assumed in both approaches.
- The center of the slab in the cooling phase is not considered in the method provided in CIRIA C766. The distribution presented in Figure 6 shows the value of the tensile strain induced in the cooling phase. It is relatively low and not exceeding the ultimate strain capacity. Thus, in the analyzed slab there is no need to analyze the cracking in the center area. Nevertheless, the tensile area exists and should be checked concerning the possible cracking.
- The results presented in Section 5.1 (simplified method) indicate serious discrepancies in the required area of reinforcement, ensuring the assumed limit value of the crack width. This is valid especially for the direct application of the Eurocode 2 standard, which does not provide detailed guidelines for reinforcement against early thermal effects in mass foundation slabs. The problem concerns mainly the unspecified recommendation for the tension area which should be used in the reinforcement calculations. Considering the slab with the slip layer and assuming the tension zone, , based on the actual stress distribution, a large reinforcement area is obtained to ensure an appropriate crack width.
- The results obtained from the CIRIA C766 method suggest that, for calculating the reinforcement in slabs with the internal restraints, the smaller area of the tension zone can be taken. Thus, instead of the actual area, , the effective area of concrete in tension, , around the reinforcement to a depth of may be applied.
- At the top surface, in the heating phase, the external restraints reduce the tensile strains to . Nevertheless, for safety reasons, it is recommended to consider only the tensile strains related to the internal restraints.
- At the top surface, in the cooling phase, the external restraints reduce the compressive strains to . This value is lower than the tensile strains induced in the heating phase. This seems to be an important observation, since a common belief that surface cracks close during the cooling phase may be incorrect.
- In the center of the slab, in the cooling phase, the maximum tensile strains are observed, equal to . They are even greater than the tensile strains at the top surface, in the heating phase. These strains are also greater than the ultimate strain capacity, which is equal to (3-day concrete) and (28-day concrete). Thus, a crack in the center may be induced. Considering a more reasonable value for 28-day-old concrete (the end of the cooling phase) and the same reinforcement as applied at the top surface, the crack width is 0.11 mm. It seems that applying such reinforcement can be an effective method for reducing the crack developing from the center to the top surface.
- The simplified method (Section 5.1) applied for the externally restrained slab results in a huge reinforcement area (70.28 cm2). Following the simplified method, this reinforcement should be concentrated in the sub-surface area. In this case, the method based on CIRIA C766 also controls the crack width at the top surfaces and consider the subsurface reinforcement, but it takes the real strains. Nevertheless, both methods omit the share of the self-induced strains in the mass slab with additional external restraints.
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Steel Stress, MPa | Maximum Bar Size, mm | ||
---|---|---|---|
wk = 0.4 mm | wk = 0.3 mm | wk = 0.2 mm | |
160 | 40 | 32 | 25 |
200 | 32 | 25 | 16 |
240 | 20 | 16 | 12 |
280 | 16 | 12 | 8 |
320 | 12 | 10 | 6 |
360 | 10 | 8 | 5 |
400 | 8 | 6 | 4 |
450 | 6 | 5 | – |
Concrete Class | C20/25 | C25/30 | C30/37 | C35/45 | C40/50 | C45/55 | C50/60 | C55/67 | C60/75 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
, MPa | 1.32 | 1.53 | 1.73 | 1.92 | 2.12 | 2.27 | 2.44 | 2.52 | 2.61 |
, MPa | 2.21 | 2.56 | 2.90 | 3.21 | 3.51 | 3.80 | 4.07 | 4.21 | 4.35 |
Value | Type of Induced Thermal Stress | ||
---|---|---|---|
Self-Induced (Internal Restraints) | Restrained Stress (External Restraints) | ||
Coefficient | 0.5 | 1.0 (pure tension) | |
Coefficient | 1.0 | 1.0 for < 300 mm 0.75 for > 800 mm [31] 0.65 for > 800 mm [32] | |
The thickness of the tensile area | at each surface | * | |
The area of the area in tension (for a length of 1 m of the slab) |
Restraint Conditions | R |
---|---|
Massive pour cast onto blinding | 0.1–0.2 |
Base of massive pour cast onto existing mass concrete | 0.3–0.4 |
Material and Technological Data | |
---|---|
Concrete class | C30/37 |
Cement type | CEM III (slag content is 58%) |
Cement content | 300 kg/m3 |
Water content | 150 kg/m3 |
Aggregate type | gravel |
Concrete density | 2400 kg/m3 |
28-day compressive strength fcm | 38 MPa |
28-day tensile strength fctm | 2.9 MPa |
Modulus of elasticity Ecm | 33 GPa |
Reinforcement at the top and bottom surface in both directions | 16 at 12 cm |
Concrete cover | 60 mm |
Ambient temperature | 15 °C |
Initial concrete temperature | 18 °C |
Wind speed | 4 m/s |
Calculated Value | Source/Assumption | Value |
---|---|---|
Based on Table 3 | 0.5 | |
Based on Table 3 | 1.0 | |
m2 | , | 0.60 |
, MPa | Based on Table 1, ø16, | 240 |
, MPa | Based on Table 2 | 1.73 |
, cm2 | Equation (1) | 21.63 |
, cm2 | Existing reinforcement, Table 5 | 16.75 |
Calculated Value | Source/Assumption | Value |
---|---|---|
Based on Table 3 | 1.0 | |
Based on Table 3 | 0.65 | |
m2 | , | 1.5 |
, MPa | Based on Table 1, ø16, | 240 |
, MPa | Based on Table 2 | 1.73 |
, cm2 | Equation (1) | 70.28 |
, cm2 | Existing reinforcement, Table 5 | 16.75 |
Calculated Value | Value |
---|---|
Maximum temperature in the center, °C | 54.8 |
Maximum temperature at the top surface, °C | 24.1 |
Maximum differential (center—top), , °C | 33.5 |
Maximum temperature drop to the ambient temperature, °C | 39.8 |
Calculated Value | Source/Vssumption | Value |
---|---|---|
, °C | Based on Table 7 | 33.5 |
, /°C | Based on [34] | 12 |
Recommended value | 0.42 | |
Recommended value | 0.65 | |
Equation (12) | 110 | |
Based on [34] | 66 | |
Cracking risk | YES | |
Equation (11) | 76.7 | |
recommended value | 1.14 | |
Bar diameter | Table 5 | 0.016 |
Bars spacing, | Table 5 | 0.12 |
Bars cover, | Table 5 | 0.06 |
Existing reinforcement, Table 5 | 16.75 | |
, | 0.17 | |
0.00985 | ||
Equation (9) | 0.99 | |
Equation (9) | 0.08 |
Calculated Value | Source/Assumption | Value |
---|---|---|
, °C | Based on Table 7 | 39.8 |
, /°C | Based on [34] | 12 |
Recommended value | 0.4 | |
Recommended value | 0.65 | |
Equation (12) | 124 | |
Based on [34] | 66 | |
Cracking risk | YES | |
Equation (11) | 91.2 | |
Recommended value | 1.14 | |
Bar diameter | Table 5 | 0.016 |
Bars spacing, | Table 5 | 0.12 |
Bars cover, | Table 5 | 0.06 |
Existing reinforcement, Table 5 | 16.75 | |
, | 0.17 | |
0.00985 | ||
Equation (9) | 0.99 | |
Equation (9) | 0.09 |
Calculated Value | Value |
---|---|
Maximum differential (center-top), , °C | 33.5 |
Heating phase—temperature increase at the top surface, °C | 6.1 |
Heating phase—temperature increase in the center, °C | 36.8 |
Cooling phase—temperature drop at the top surface, °C | 9.1 |
Cooling phase—temperature drop in the center, °C | 39.8 |
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Klemczak, B.; Żmij, A. Insight into Thermal Stress Distribution and Required Reinforcement Reducing Early-Age Cracking in Mass Foundation Slabs. Materials 2021, 14, 477. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14030477
Klemczak B, Żmij A. Insight into Thermal Stress Distribution and Required Reinforcement Reducing Early-Age Cracking in Mass Foundation Slabs. Materials. 2021; 14(3):477. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14030477
Chicago/Turabian StyleKlemczak, Barbara, and Aneta Żmij. 2021. "Insight into Thermal Stress Distribution and Required Reinforcement Reducing Early-Age Cracking in Mass Foundation Slabs" Materials 14, no. 3: 477. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14030477
APA StyleKlemczak, B., & Żmij, A. (2021). Insight into Thermal Stress Distribution and Required Reinforcement Reducing Early-Age Cracking in Mass Foundation Slabs. Materials, 14(3), 477. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma14030477