FRP-to-concrete bond behaviour under high strain rates
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Li, Xiaoqin
Abstract
Fibre reinforced polymer (FRP) composites have been used for strengthening
concrete structures since early 1990s. More recently, FRP has been used for
retrofitting concrete structures for high energy events such as impact and blast.
Debonding at the FRP-to-concrete interface is one of the predominant failure modes
for both static and dynamic loading. Although extensive research has been conducted
on the static bond behaviour, the bond-slip mechanics under high strain rates is not
well understood yet. This thesis is mainly concerned with the FRP-to-concrete bond
behaviour under dynamic loading.
Because debonding mostly occurs in the concrete adjacent to the FRP, the behaviour
of concrete is of crucial importance for the FRP-to-concrete bond behaviour. The
early emphasis of this thesis is thus on the meso-scale concrete modelling of concrete
with appropriate consideration of static and dynamic properties. Issues related to FE
modelling of tensile and compressive localization of concrete are first investigated in
detail under static condition using the K&C concrete damage model in LS-DYNA. It
is discovered for the first time that dilation of concrete plays an important role in the
FRP-to-concrete bond behaviour. This has led to the development of a model relating
the shear dilation factor to the concrete strength based on the modelling of a large
number of static FRP-to-concrete shear tests, forming the basis for dynamic
modelling.
Concrete dynamic increasing factor (DIF) has been a subject of extensive
investigation and debate for many years, but it is for the first time discovered in this
study that mesh objectivity cannot be achieved in meso-scale modelling of concrete
under high strain rate deformation. This has led to the development of a mesh and
strain rate dependent concrete tension DIF model. This DIF model shall have wide
applications in meso-scale modelling of concrete, not limited to the topic in this
thesis.
Based on a detailed numerical investigation of the FRP-to-concrete bond shear test
under different loading rates, taking on the above issues into careful consideration, a
slip rate dependent FRP-to-concrete dynamic bond-slip model is finally proposed for
the first time. The FE predictions deploring this proposed bond-slip model are
compaed with test results of a set of FRP-to-concrete bonded specimens under
impact loading, and a FRP plated slab under blast loading, validating the model.
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