TY - JOUR
T1 - Wedge splitting test for a steel–concrete interface
AU - Walter, Rasmus
AU - Østergaard, Lennart
AU - Olesen, John Forbes
AU - Stang, Henrik
PY - 2005
Y1 - 2005
N2 - This paper presents a test method designated for the determination of the stress-crack opening relationship of a steel-concrete interface. The method is based on the well known wedge splitting test (WST), and it is illustrated how to obtain the stress-crack opening relationship through an inverse analysis. This inversion method utilizes the cracked hinge model, modified such that it describes the problem at hand. In this paper, pure concrete and steel-concrete composite specimens are tested and compared. It turns out that interfacial cracking of a bimaterial specimen usually behaves as one of the parent materials, in this case concrete. The stress-crack opening relationship of both the concrete and bimaterial specimens are obtained through the proposed inverse analysis. The results show, that interfacial cracking is dominated by the so-called wall-effect and its behavior can be described as quasi-brittle. However, due to the wall-effect, interfacial cracking is more brittle than for the pure concrete.
AB - This paper presents a test method designated for the determination of the stress-crack opening relationship of a steel-concrete interface. The method is based on the well known wedge splitting test (WST), and it is illustrated how to obtain the stress-crack opening relationship through an inverse analysis. This inversion method utilizes the cracked hinge model, modified such that it describes the problem at hand. In this paper, pure concrete and steel-concrete composite specimens are tested and compared. It turns out that interfacial cracking of a bimaterial specimen usually behaves as one of the parent materials, in this case concrete. The stress-crack opening relationship of both the concrete and bimaterial specimens are obtained through the proposed inverse analysis. The results show, that interfacial cracking is dominated by the so-called wall-effect and its behavior can be described as quasi-brittle. However, due to the wall-effect, interfacial cracking is more brittle than for the pure concrete.
U2 - 10.1016/j.engfracmech.2005.06.001
DO - 10.1016/j.engfracmech.2005.06.001
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0013-7944
VL - 72
SP - 2565
EP - 2583
JO - Engineering Fracture Mechanics
JF - Engineering Fracture Mechanics
IS - 17
ER -