Control of thermal cracking in young concrete is of great importance to
ensure a desired service life time and function of a structure. Making
reliable thermal stress estimations, and thereby conclusions about cracking
risks, involves advanced modelling of material properties and structural
restraint. The main objective of this thesis is to further develop and, for
safer application in engineering practice, simplify:
(I) Modelling of material properties
(II) Modelling of structural restraint
(III) Methods for crack estimation
(I) - A new basic creep model, primarily aimed for early age concrete in
thermal stress analysis, is formulated based on piece-wise linear curves in
logarithm of time. The new model is, in relation to other commonly used
creep models, a flexible and robust formulation that enables it to make
reliable creep modelling with very few test data. Another advantage with the
formulation is that the appearance of negative relaxation in linear
viscoelastic modelling is very small and negligible with respect to thermal
stresses. The model shows very good agreement directly with experimental
creep data and indirectly with measured thermal stresses, whereby the
formulation has been used to model the viscoelastic behaviour of the
concrete. The formulation also has the best correlation with experimental
data compared to other creep models that have been analysed in this thesis.
Based on the new formulation, creep prediction formulas are established and
evaluated. It is shown that general model parameters can be established
whereby the long-term creep behaviour is clearly dependent on the modulus of
elasticity with larger creep deformations for lower E-modulus. An average
error related to creep of 15 percent is what can be expected from most
thermal stress analyses that are performed with standard sets of creep data
today. By use of the established prediction formulas it is possible to
reduce the error by almost two thirds ( ) only by adding the results from a
test of the modulus of elasticity at the age of 28 days. For more advanced
applications, where even better accuracy is required, it is recommended that
at least a creep compliance test is performed at two loading ages, of which
one at the age of 28 days.
(II) - Modelling of the restraint to which a structural element is subjected
is one of the most important issues that have to be considered in a thermal
stress analysis. Here it is shown that the complex structural restraint
behaviour can be described by means of simple restraint coefficients giving
an agreeing thermal stress development compared to both more exact Finite
Element (FE) calculations and measured stresses. It is also shown that it is
possible to evaluate the structural restraint coefficients by means of
simple elastic approaches with acceptable accuracy compared to more
realistic viscoelastic approaches and the “true” restraint behaviour of a
real full-scale structure.
(III) - Simplified direct methods for estimation of thermal through cracking
are established as a direct calculation during contraction from the time
when a restrained hardening concrete element is stress free to the time when
the maximum risk of cracking appears. In the methods, that are based on
stress, strain and temperature formulations, the ageing of the concrete is
considered by means of coefficients dependent on the age at loading, which
here is defined as the age when the element is stress free. Comparisons with
a more advanced differential type of method shows very good accuracy, which
means that the simplified direct methods can be used to estimate thermal
cracking risks.
A strain based method is then reformulated for practical application by
describing a newly cast structural concrete element and an adjoining
structure as one system where only the differential elastic deformations
between the two parts contribute to the stress development. Based on a given
water to binder ratio of the concrete, a known temperature development and a
defined restraint coefficient for a decisive part of the structure, the risk
of thermal cracking can be estimated. An application of the simplified
method, performed with results from field tests and observations, shows that
it is possible to estimate thermal cracking risks with good accuracy.