Variation Pattern of the Elastic Modulus of Concrete under Combined Humidity and Heat Conditions
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Preparation of Specimen
3. Experiment and Results
3.1. High-Temperature Experiments
3.2. Experimental Results
3.2.1. Variation of Elastic Modulus of Natural Drying Concrete at Different Temperatures
3.2.2. Variation Pattern of Elastic Modulus of Concrete at Room Temperature with Different Moisture Contents
3.2.3. Variation Pattern of Elastic Modulus of Concrete under Combined Humidity and Heat Conditions
- (1)
- The elastic modulus of stoved concrete (i.e., W = 0%) decreases monotonically with the increase in temperature, which is the temperature-weakening effect of the elastic modulus. At room temperature (T = 20 °C), DIF(T = 20 °C, W) = Kw, the humidity-heat coupling factor DIF of elastic modulus increases with the increase of moisture content W, and DIF > 1 are always present at room temperature. The strengthening effect of water on elastic modulus is verified.
- (2)
- Under the combined humidity and heat condition, when DIF = 1, the influence of the water strengthening effect and temperature weakening effect on the elastic modulus is equivalent. Under this condition, the elastic modulus of concrete ETW is equal to that of stoved concrete at T = 20 °C, ETW = Ed. When T = 200 °C if moisture content W < 2.5%, then DIF < 1 means that the influence of temperature weakening effect on elastic modulus is dominant in the competition between the temperature weakening effect and water strengthening effect. If moisture content W > 2.5%, then DIF > 1 means that the influence of water strengthening effect on elastic modulus is dominant in the competition between water strengthening effect and temperature weakening effect. However, the DIF of T = 200 °C is smaller than that of natural drying specimens at T = 20 °C. When T = 420 °C, 520 °C and 620 °C, the DIF is always smaller than that of the stoved concrete at T = 20 °C.
- (3)
- The elastic modulus of soaked concrete at different temperatures shows different trends. When T = 20 °C, T = 200 °C, T = 400 °C and T = 520 °C, it can be seen that DIF increases with the rise of moisture content W, while when T = 620 °C, DIF declines with the rise of moisture content W. The fitting parameter B(T) describes the change rate of DIF. When B(T) > 0, DIF monotonically increases with the increase of moisture content; when B(T) < 0, DIF declines with the rise of moisture content. As seen from Figure 4, B(T) declines with the temperature rise. That is, the increasing amplitude of DIF gradually declines with the temperature rise. When T = 620 °C and B(T) < 0, DIF no longer increases with the rise of moisture content but shows a decreasing trend.
- (1)
- At T = 20 °C, the higher the moisture content of specimens, the greater their elastic modulus. However, With the increase in temperature, the elastic modulus of concrete with different moisture contents shows a monotonically decreasing trend. And the rate of decrease is related to the moisture content. The higher the moisture content, the faster the high-temperature elastic modulus decreases.
- (2)
- Compared with the elastic modulus of concrete stoved in the oven, when the temperature reached 500 °C, the elastic modulus of concrete with different moisture content is smaller than that of stoved concrete at the same temperature. The DIF(T,W)-T curves of concrete with different moisture content and DIF(T,W = 0%)-T curves of stoved concrete intersect very closely, and almost all of the intersection points are in the temperature range of 500–550 °C. The critical temperature Tc = 543 °C calculated by fitting Equation (6) is also in this temperature range. Considering the permissible error of fitting results, the temperature range between 500–550 °C can be considered the critical temperature interval. When the ambient temperature of wet concrete is within the critical temperature interval, the elastic modulus of wet concrete is a little different from that of stoved concrete at the same temperature. The strengthening effect of water on the elastic modulus in micropores offsets part of the weakening effect of crack propagation caused by water phase change on the elastic modulus. The unoffset weakening effect is equivalent to the temperature-weakening effect of stoved concrete. In other words, the comprehensive influence of initial moisture content in concrete within the critical temperature interval on elastic modulus is not apparent. In this critical temperature interval, the elastic modulus of wet concrete is close to that of concrete stoved in the oven. When the temperature T < 500 °C, although the elastic modulus of concrete specimens with higher moisture content decreases faster with the increase of temperature, the elastic modulus of wet concrete is still higher than that of stoved concrete at the same temperature, and the influence of water on the elastic modulus still shows a strengthening effect; When the temperature T > 550 °C, The higher the initial moisture content of concrete specimens before heating, the smaller the elastic modulus with the increase of temperature. The initial water stored inside the concrete before heating decreases the elastic modulus. Whereas, through the analysis in Section 4, it can be seen that the decrease of the elastic modulus in this temperature interval Is not due to the weakening effect of water but the weakening effect of the derived cracks inside the high-temperature concrete after the water occurs phase change and disappears.
- (3)
- When DIF = 1, as mentioned above, the influence of water strengthening and temperature weakening on the elastic modulus of concrete is equivalent, and the two effects can offset each other. That is, the competition between the temperature-weakening effect and the water-strengthening effect resulted in the elastic modulus of the concrete under combined humidity and heat condition being equal to that of the stoved concrete at T = 20 °C. According to the intersection point between the fitting curve DIF-T of concrete under different moisture content and the straight line DIF = 1 (DIF of stoved concrete at T = 20 °C) in Figure 5, it can be concluded that the higher the moisture content is, the more the intersection point moves back. The temperature at the intersection point corresponding to moisture content W is called characteristic temperature Tw. According to the fitting results, the higher the moisture content, the higher the corresponding characteristic temperature Tw, which can be referred to in Table 4.
3.2.4. Comparison of Elastic Modulus and Compressive Strength of Concrete under Humidity-Heat Condition
4. Mechanism Analysis
- (1)
- At room temperature, concrete elastic modulus has water strengthening effect, that is, the humidity-heat coupling factor DIF (T = 20 °C, W) ≥ 1, for the following reasons:
- ①
- When the natural drying concrete is soaked in water, the unhydrated cement can be rehydrated or the exudated calcium hydroxide is carbonized to form calcium carbonate, which has a refining effect on the microporous structure of concrete [33]. In addition, the dry shrinkage reversible cracks G1 formed in the natural drying process of concrete may heal when they are exposed to water. Both the refinement of the microporous structure and the closure of reversible cracks will increase the elastic modulus.
- ②
- As the moisture content of concrete rises, the pores and cracks inside the concrete are filled with free water and physically adsorbed water. The compressibility of water is far less than that of air, and the viscosity of water is greater than that of air. The water in the microcrack is subjected to great resistance when flowing under the load. Moreover, as a part of the concrete, the water can also bear a certain load, making the concrete rigidity increase. However, the water accumulated at the crack tip has a tension that promotes the irreversible cracks G2 to expand and form new hydration G from the original damaged nucleus. The pore water pressure inside the cracks at T = 20 °C is small, and the splitting effect of water is weak. Compared with the healing of reversible dry shrinkage cracks and the strengthening effect of water replacing air on the elastic modulus, the evolution of hydration crack at room temperature has a less weakening effect on the elastic modulus. Therefore, the elastic modulus of wet concrete at room temperature is larger than dry concrete.
- (2)
- At high temperatures, the elastic modulus of concrete under different moisture contents declines with the rise of temperature T. During heating, the liquid water inside the wet concrete is gradually replaced by vapor. As mentioned above, the compressibility of vapor is larger than that of water, while the viscosity of vapor is smaller than that of water, which reduces the elastic modulus of concrete. In addition, the irreversible dry shrinkage cracks formed during the curing and drying of concrete specimens and the irreversible hydration cracks formed during secondary hydration will further evolve with the increase of internal pore pressure and the occurrence of physicochemical reaction, resulting in the decline of concrete elastic modulus. The decline of concrete elastic modulus caused by water phase change and microcrack propagation due to temperature rise is the temperature-weakening effect of elastic modulus. Under the humidity-heat condition, the variation of elastic modulus of concrete results from the competition between the strengthening effect of water and the weakening effect of temperature, and the DIF in different temperature ranges show different characteristics.
- ①
- When the ambient temperature T of concrete with different moisture content is less than its characteristic temperature Tw, that is, T < Tw. However, DIF decreases with increasing temperature. There is still DIF (T, W) ≥ 1. Within this temperature range, free water and physically adsorbed water inside concrete materials gradually lose, and the phase change of water absorbs a lot of heat. The hydration cracks G formed during concrete immersion can be divided into reversible cracks G3 and irreversible cracks G4. Cracks G3 heal with water loss, and cracks G4 evolve further with the temperature rise. At this stage, the crack growth is relatively stable, and the growth rate is relatively slow. Compared with the strengthening effect of the water kept in micro cracks and closure of the cracks G3, the weakening effect of the irreversible cracks G4 growth caused by temperature and phase change on the elastic modulus is weak. Therefore, within this temperature range, the elastic modulus of wet concrete is larger than that of stoved concrete at T = 20 °C.
- ②
- When ambient temperature T is greater than characteristic temperature Tw and less than critical temperature Tc, that is, Tw < T < Tc, then DIF(T,W) < l, The critical temperature Tc is about 500–550 °C. With the rise of temperature and loss of liquid water, cracks grow further, and the crack growth rate increases with the rise of the moisture content of wet concrete. This is because the longer the soak time of concrete, the more irreversible hydration cracks will be. Although the elastic modulus of wet concrete at room temperature is larger than that of dry concrete due to the strengthening effect of water, with the rise of temperature, the internal interlayer water and chemically bound water are gradually lost, and the internal energy is transformed into the surface energy required for cracks propagation. Therefore, the higher the initial moisture content before heating, the more cracks are generated during the water phase change process and the faster the rate of elastic modulus decline. However, at this stage, the weakening effect of temperature on the elastic modulus is still weakened by the water that has not yet been lost. Compared with the elastic modulus of the stoved concrete, the elastic modulus of humidity-heat coupling is smaller than that at T = 20 °C, but larger than that at the same high temperature.
- ③
- When the ambient temperature T is greater than the critical temperature Tc, T > Tc, then DIF(T,W) < 1, the liquid water inside the crack disappears completely with the end of phase change and is replaced by gas. Crack groups formed in the hydration process and physicochemical reaction process grow rapidly at high temperatures. Similar to the previous stage, the higher the moisture content, the more the number of derived cracks in the concrete after the water phase change, the faster the concrete damage evolution rate, the faster the elastic modulus decline rate, and the smaller the elastic modulus value. Therefore, the moisture content shows an “apparent weakening effect” on the elastic modulus of concrete in this temperature range, but in fact, it is not the water that has a weakening effect on the elastic modulus, but the cracks G5 derived from inside concrete after the water phase change and disappearance. The new cracks G5 expand rapidly with the increase of temperature until the main crack that leads to the fracture of the specimen is formed. In this temperature range, the elastic modulus of wet concrete is less than that of stoved concrete at the same temperature.
5. Conclusions
- (1)
- Under the humidity-heat condition, the relationship between the variation factor DIF of elastic modulus and moisture content can be expressed as DIF(T,W) = A(T) + B(T)W, where the fitting coefficients A(T) and B(T) depend only on temperature. When T = 20 °C, DIF(T,W) = Kw(T), A(T) and B(T) degenerate into constants h and g. The elastic modulus of concrete declines with the rise of temperature, and the higher the moisture content, the more significant the decline rate of elastic modulus.
- (2)
- Under the humidity-heat condition, the equation of the variation factor DIF of elastic modulus with temperature can be expressed as: DIF = b/[1 + ep(T*−u)], where the fitting coefficients b, p and u are functions of moisture content. The high-temperature elastic modulus of natural drying concrete decreases with the increase in temperature. The relationship between the elastic modulus of natural drying concrete variation factor KT and temperature can be expressed as KT = a/[1 + e−m(T*−n)], where the fitting coefficients a, m and n are constants.
- (3)
- Within a certain temperature range (T ≤ 375 °C, 375 °C is the characteristic temperature of saturated concrete), there is an equivalent relation between the influence of moisture content and temperature on elastic modulus: . When T is less than the characteristic temperature Tw, DIF > 1. The water-strengthening effect of the elastic modulus is greater than the temperature-weakening effect; When the temperature T is greater than the characteristic temperature Tw, there is DIF < 1. The weakening effect of temperature is greater than the strengthening effect of water. If the moisture content is increased or the ambient temperature is lowered, the elastic modulus will increase; however, if the moisture content is decreased or the temperature is raised, the elastic modulus will decrease. In concrete structure engineering, changing the modulus of elastic modulus can be achieved by controlling the moisture content and temperature of the concrete according to the equivalent relation of the two.
- (4)
- As the moisture content increases, the variation of the elastic modulus shows different trends with the critical temperature Tc (the critical temperature Tc is about 500–550 °C) as the boundary. When the temperature T < Tc, the water stored in concrete before heating presents a strengthening effect on the elastic modulus; When the temperature T > Tc, the water stored in concrete before heating on the elastic modulus presents an “apparent weakening effect”. In this case, the decrease of the elastic modulus is caused by the deterioration of the internally derived microcracks after the water disappears.
- (5)
- The variation of the elastic modulus of concrete results from the phase change of water and the evolution of cracks under the coupled action of heat and humidity. When the strengthening effect of water and reversible crack healing on the elastic modulus is dominant, the elastic modulus of concrete material increases; conversely, when the weakening effect of crack propagation on the elastic modulus is dominant, the elastic modulus of concrete material decreases. Based on our existing research results and macroscopic experiments, the variation pattern of elastic modulus under the coupling condition of heat and humidity is explained by the evolutionary mechanism of cracks. However, micro-scale experiments need to be carried out for verification. In addition, the above research results are based on the heat-humidity coupling experiment of concrete with the same aggregate type and water/cement ratio (see Table 1). Further studies are needed to investigate the differences in the elastic modulus of concrete under the combined heat and humidity conditions that may be caused by different aggregate types and water-cement ratios.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Cement (kg/m3) | Sand (kg/m3) | Aggregate (kg/m3) | Water (kg/m3) | Superplasticizer (kg/m3) |
---|---|---|---|---|
425 | 600 | 1132 | 184 | 8 |
T/°C | A | B |
---|---|---|
20 | 1.00 | 0.08 |
200 | 0.82 | 0.07 |
400 | 0.77 | 0.04 |
520 | 0.68 | 0.01 |
620 | 0.58 | −0.03 |
W | b | p | u |
---|---|---|---|
0 | 1.73 | 0.03 | 10.86 |
1.81 | 1.16 | 0.10 | 28.92 |
2.60 | 1.15 | 0.14 | 28.56 |
3.40 | 1.22 | 0.15 | 27.19 |
3.74 | 1.27 | 0.17 | 26.16 |
W/% | Tw/°C |
---|---|
0 | 20 |
1.81 | 200 |
2.60 | 320 |
3.40 | 340 |
3.74 (saturation) | 375 |
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Li, P.; Zhang, Y.; Duan, S.; Huang, R.; Gu, J. Variation Pattern of the Elastic Modulus of Concrete under Combined Humidity and Heat Conditions. Materials 2023, 16, 5447. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16155447
Li P, Zhang Y, Duan S, Huang R, Gu J. Variation Pattern of the Elastic Modulus of Concrete under Combined Humidity and Heat Conditions. Materials. 2023; 16(15):5447. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16155447
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, Ping, Yanru Zhang, Shiwei Duan, Ruiyuan Huang, and Jiming Gu. 2023. "Variation Pattern of the Elastic Modulus of Concrete under Combined Humidity and Heat Conditions" Materials 16, no. 15: 5447. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16155447
APA StyleLi, P., Zhang, Y., Duan, S., Huang, R., & Gu, J. (2023). Variation Pattern of the Elastic Modulus of Concrete under Combined Humidity and Heat Conditions. Materials, 16(15), 5447. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma16155447