INFLUENCE OF FRACTURE PROCESS ZONE HEIGHT ON FRACTURE ENERGY OF CONCRETE

The implication of modelling concrete fracture with a fictitious crack of zero fracture process zone (FPZ) height is addressed in this paper because FPZ height, in reality, is not zero and is bound to vary during crack growth. The ligament effect on fracture energy GF is explained by the nonuniform distribution of a local fracture energy gf showing the influence of specimen boundary and variation of FPZ height. The nonuniform gf distribution is then used to determine the size-independent GF. The recent boundary-effect model based on a bilinear gf function is confirmed by the essential work of fracture (EWF) model for the yielding of deeply notched polymer and metal specimens. The EWF model provides a theoretical basis for the bilinear gf distribution. The principal rationale of the boundary-effect model, the influence of FPZ height on fracture energy, is supported by experimental observations of thickness effect on fracture toughness of thin polymeric adhesives between metals.

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    Elsevier

    The Boulevard, Langford Lane
    Kidlington, Oxford  United Kingdom  OX5 1GB
  • Authors:
    • Hu, Xiaojian
    • Duan, K
  • Publication Date: 2004-8

Language

  • English

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  • Accession Number: 00983071
  • Record Type: Publication
  • Files: TRIS
  • Created Date: Dec 9 2004 12:00AM