Analytical Method and Analysis of Cold-Joint Interface
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Shear Interface Behaviour
3. Analytical Method
3.1. Curve of Concrete Interface with Connectors
- At stage 1, shear at the concrete interface is only transferred by cohesive bonds between concrete layers. The authors of experimental shear tests noted that shear stress (Equation (1)) is the point at which the first cracks develop at the interface:
- At the start of stage 2, cohesive forces at the interface begin to decrease and the other shear transfer component, which consists of the connectors, joins the shear resistance. However, the analysis of the experimental results indicates that, at this stage, cohesion is still the main contributor to shear transfer. When this analytical model was built, it was assumed that, at the end of stage 2, the highest shear stress of (Equation (3)) was reached at the concrete interface. The analysis of experimental tests led to the conclusion that this value depended on coefficient (Equation (4)), which is influenced by the ratio of . is the compressive strength of the concrete, is the strength of shear connectors and is the ratio of connectors which cross the interface. When the ratio of is equal to an approximate value of 0.18, the highest shear stress is equal to the following shear stress point . If the ratio is lower than 0.18, is higher than . Additionally, the value of must meet the condition of The physical meaning of this ratio is that the higher the concrete strength, the more that is influenced by cohesion bonds. The lower the concrete strength, the more it is assumed that cohesion had already been lost and that had been reached only by the shear resistance of connectors. Shear stress can be determined by:Shear slip (Equation (5)) is composed of two components. The first component defines the magnitude of the slip based on the value of concrete strength . The greater the value, the lower the slippage. The second component defines the influence of connectors on the value of the slip. It was noticed that the lower the ratio of , the stiffer the shear stress–slip behaviour and the smaller the slip . On the contrary, the higher the ratio, the more ductile the behaviour and the larger the slip. Shear slip can be determined by:
- At stage 3, it is assumed that all cohesive bonds between the concrete layers are lost and that the friction and dowel action are the only shear mechanisms that transfer shear stress along the interface. This is indicated by the shear stress (Equation (6)). The equation for this stress was acquired from Model Code 2010 [5] and modified with reference to the experimental results to suit the behaviour of this type of interface. It is presumed that, at the start of the stage (, friction is a predominant shear mechanism and dowel action is a secondary mechanism. This is indicated by coefficients of 1 and 0.5 before the friction and dowel action components, respectively. Shear stress can be determined by:Friction stress is composed of three friction stress values that are multiplied by the friction coefficient (Equation (7)). is the value of external compressive stress that is imposed perpendicular to the interface plane. determines the friction stress value due to connector clamping force and defines the minimal value of friction stress. This equation shows how much friction stress remains when there is no external compression () and no connectors crossing the interface. Friction stress can be determined by:The magnitude of dowel action stress depends on the strength of concrete and connector steel and the connector ratio (Equation (8)). The more the interface is crossed by connectors and the stronger the materials that are used, the more dowel action partakes in shear resistance. Dowel action stress can be determined by:Stage 3 ends with a slip (Equation (9)). Shear slip is composed of two components. Just like the previously defined shear slip (), the value of decreases with increasing concrete strength . The second component determines how much the slippage is suppressed by the presence of connectors. The larger the total connectors’ cross-sectional area , the smaller the total value of . Slip can be determined:
- At stage 4, concrete interface behaviour is governed by friction resistance and dowel action. At the end of stage () (Equation (10)), dowel action becomes a predominant shear mechanism and friction becomes a secondary mechanism. This is indicated by the coefficients of 0.5 and 1 before the friction and dowel action components, respectively. Connectors yield later at this stage. Shear stress can be determined by:The final component of this shear stress–slippage relationship curve is the slip (Equation (11)). The value of this component was chosen to be 6 mm. The analysis of experimental results led to the conclusion that 6 mm was an optimal value to end the estimation of concrete interface behaviour. On average, the value of 6 mm was the point at which many experimental tests were stopped. Additionally, the authors of this paper decided that concrete interface subjected to slip larger than 6 mm could be considered severely broken and no further evaluation would be necessary. Slip can be taken as:
3.2. Curve of Interface without Connectors
- During the analysis of the literature describing the experimental results of interfaces without connectors, it was noticed that, from the start of the shear loading to the maximum interface shear strength (), interface behaviour was more rigid than that for interfaces with shear connectors. The experimental curves displayed a linear stress–slip relationship from the start of the loading to the maximum shear stress. This means that point does not exist. It can be assumed that the interface starts cracking and fails at the same time, which is at point . The elimination of the shear point results in stage 1 starting from the start of the loading and ending at point (Equation (12)). The calculation of shear stress is similar to that for concrete interfaces with connectors; however, coefficient is used instead of coefficient (Equation (13)). The physical meaning of is that the larger the interface area and the higher the concrete’s strength, the larger the value of . This value has to meet the condition of . The higher the value of , the further is from the next shear stress point . Shear stress can be determined by:Coefficient can be determined by:The calculation of slip is quite similar to that for an interface with connectors; however, in order to determine the slip value for a concrete interface with no connectors, all equation components that describe connector properties, such as and , have to be equal to 0 (Equation (14)). This leads to the equation having only one component, which describes how the slip is influenced by concrete’s compressive strength . Slip is determined by:
- Stage 2 of the behaviour of the interface without connectors ends with shear stress . At this stage, interface behaviour is only governed by friction stress. That is why dowel action should be eliminated (Equation (15)). Shear stress is determined by:All factors that cause friction stress related to connectors should be eliminated (Equation (16)). Friction stress can be determined by:
- At stage 3, the interface is slipping until the final point . Here, dowel action also has to be eliminated (Equation (18)). Shear stress is determined by:
4. Validation of Analytical Method
5. Numerical Parametric Interface Analysis
6. Conclusions
- This article presents a novel analytical model for the calculation of layered concrete interface behaviour. Two shear stress–shear slippage relationship curves (for interfaces with connectors and without connectors) were developed. The proposed analytical model could be employed up to the point when the layers severely slipped. Cold-joint interface behaviour analysis was performed by predicting the shear stress and slippage values using the proposed analytical method, by building a numerical model and employing finite element analysis. It appears that the analytical values were similar to the experimental values, especially at the point of highest interface shear stress. The numerical analysis shear stress results were lower than the experimental results up to the point of highest experimental shear stress and then, in some cases, surpassed the experimental results at the stage of friction and connector action.
- The comparison of the experimental results, numerical analysis results and the results acquired by the analytical method led to the conclusion that the proposed analytical method is suitable for the analysis of a concrete interface with layers cast at different times.
- The numerical parametric analysis led to the conclusion that, by increasing the interface friction magnitude, a higher interface shear resistance could be achieved. The interface behaved more rigidly in the earlier behaviour stages. Gradually, at a certain friction angle (coefficient), the cold-joint interface started to behave like a monolithic interface.
- The parametric analysis of the influence of connector diameter led to the conclusion that a higher interface shear capacity can be obtained by choosing a larger connector diameter. As with higher friction, an interface with a larger connector bar starts to behave more rigidly. However, by increasing the diameter of the bar, the interface might fail earlier due to the crushing of the interface’s concrete.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Properties | S-C65L30-6D8-Ba | S-C65L40-6D10-Ba | S-C65L50-6D12-Ba | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Older Layer | Newer Layer | Older Layer | Newer Layer | Older Layer | Newer Layer | |
Elastic modulus | 38.57 GPa | 30.59 GPa | 38.57 GPa | 33.35 GPa | 38.57 GPa | 35.65 GPa |
Compressive strength | 65 MPa | 30 MPa | 65 MPa | 40 MPa | 65 MPa | 50 MPa |
Compressive fracture energy | 27.74 N/mm | 24.66 N/mm | 27.74 N/mm | 26.44 N/mm | 27.74 N/mm | 27.50 N/mm |
Tensile strength | 4.27 MPa | 2.36 MPa | 4.27 MPa | 3.02 MPa | 4.27 MPa | 3.63 MPa |
Tensile fracture energy | 0.111 N/mm | 0.065 N/mm | 0.111 N/mm | 0.079 N/mm | 0.111 N/mm | 0.093 N/mm |
Properties | S-C65L30-6D8-Ba | S-C65L40-6D10-Ba | S-C65L50-6D12-Ba |
---|---|---|---|
Connectors’ cross-sectional diameter | 8 mm | 10 mm | 12 mm |
Number of connectors | 6 | 6 | 6 |
Connectors’ steel elastic modulus | 197 GPa | 203 GPa | 205 GPa |
Connectors’ steel yield stress | 285.13 MPa | 411.88 MPa | 418.98 MPa |
Connectors’ steel ultimate strength | 429.41 MPa | 559.07 MPa | 535.87 MPa |
Interface normal stiffness modulus | 30.59 GPa | 33.35 GPa | 35.65 GPa |
Interface shear stiffness modulus | 12.24 GPa | 13.34 GPa | 14.26 GPa |
Interface cohesion | 0.82 MPa | 1.06 MPa | 1.27 MPa |
Interface friction angle | 30° | 30° | 30° |
Interface clamping stress | 1.38 MPa | 3.10 MPa | 4.55 MPa |
φ = 10° | φ = 20° | φ = 30° | φ = 40° | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Point | τ, MPa | s, mm | τ, MPa | s, mm | τ, MPa | s, mm | τ, MPa | s, mm |
A | 2.39 | 0.18 | 3.15 | 0.36 | 4.36 | 0.49 | 5.39 | 0.59 |
B | 1.41 | 6.00 | 2.58 | 6.00 | 4.59 | 6.00 | 6.25 | 1.30 |
Point | τ, MPa | s, mm | τ, MPa | s, mm | τ, MPa | s, mm | τ, MPa | s, mm |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A | 2.27 | 0.26 | 3.23 | 0.39 | 4.36 | 0.49 | 5.57 | 0.61 |
B | 1.92 | 6.00 | 3.17 | 6.00 | 4.58 | 6.00 | 6.07 | 1.82 |
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Masėnas, J.; Šalna, R.; Juknevičius, L.; Valivonis, J. Analytical Method and Analysis of Cold-Joint Interface. Appl. Sci. 2023, 13, 4176. https://doi.org/10.3390/app13074176
Masėnas J, Šalna R, Juknevičius L, Valivonis J. Analytical Method and Analysis of Cold-Joint Interface. Applied Sciences. 2023; 13(7):4176. https://doi.org/10.3390/app13074176
Chicago/Turabian StyleMasėnas, Juozas, Remigijus Šalna, Linas Juknevičius, and Juozas Valivonis. 2023. "Analytical Method and Analysis of Cold-Joint Interface" Applied Sciences 13, no. 7: 4176. https://doi.org/10.3390/app13074176
APA StyleMasėnas, J., Šalna, R., Juknevičius, L., & Valivonis, J. (2023). Analytical Method and Analysis of Cold-Joint Interface. Applied Sciences, 13(7), 4176. https://doi.org/10.3390/app13074176