5.2. Stress Conversion
The CFT combines concrete and steel tubes so that the stress that impacts on these specimens is not the same as plain concrete. It is well known that creep and shrinkage of the concrete core directly affect the time-dependent deformation of CFT. If the surfaces of the components are not the same level, as presented in
Figure 5a,b, the steel tube and concrete core work as separate constituents and the applied stress on the specimens cannot be calculated correctly. In case of the plane remains plane, as shown in
Figure 5c, the stress and strain are uniform throughout the steel tube and concrete core so that two components of CFT can be designed as parts of a single member and full composite function can work accurately.
According to the theory of elasticity, the stress of CFT is converted to find exactly applied loading values on the specimens. The theory load of CFT can be expressed as
where
,
,
are the axial load of CFT specimen, concrete and steel component, respectively (kN).
It is assumed that the plane remains plane under axial compression, which is the essence of strain compatibility so that the steel strain is the same as the concrete strain at all locations and can be calculated by the following equation
The load applies to the steel tube can be calculated on that of the concrete core as
In which , are cross sections of the concrete core and steel tube, respectively (mm2); , are the elastic modulus of concrete core and steel tube, respectively (MPa); , are the elastic strain of concrete core and steel tube, respectively.
The loading force of the concrete core of the CFT can be calculated the same as with the SCC specimens.
where
is the axial load (kN);
is the designated stress ratio;
is the compressive strength at loading age
t′ (MPa);
is the cross section of the concrete component (mm
2).
When CFT is under axial loading, various cylinder stresses appear in the composite member, including vertical stress of the steel tube (
or
) and vertical stress of the concrete core (
), circumferential stress in steel tube (
), radial stress (
) as shown in
Figure 6.
The stress that occurs on loading of the composite specimen was found to be directly proportional to the strain. The stress–strain relationship of the CFT subjected to axial compression follows Hook’s law within the elastic range.
The vertical stress of steel tube
and concrete core
can be calculated by
In which , are the vertical and circumferential stress in steel tube (MPa), respectively; , are the vertical and circumferential strain of the steel tube (με); is the Poisson’s ratio of steel (); is the conversion area of the concrete core (mm2).
Additionally, when the specimens are embedded with the VWSG inside the specimen, the conversion area can be obtained by
where
is the cross section of the VWSG (mm
2);
is the conversion factor;
is the modulus of elasticity of the VWSG (MPa);
is the elastic modulus of the test specimens at loading age
t′.
The conversion stress
and real stress ratio
are determined by the following equations
According to the loading force equations with the designated stress ratio (
) of 0.3, the load value of SCC specimens is 180 kN and 202 kN at 14 days and 28 days, respectively, and the axial load of the CFT specimens (
) is 325 kN at 14 days. The elastic strain of the concrete core and steel tube can be determined by the strain gauges. The elastic modulus of the steel tube and stainless steel of the VWSG are 200 GPa and 195 GPa, respectively. Poisson’s ratio of the steel
is 0.3. The conversion of the designated stress ratios to real stress ratios by consideration of the VWSG embedded in the specimen is given in
Table 4.
5.6. Comparison of Creep and Shrinkage with Prediction Models
B4 model and B4-TW model were used to predict the creep and shrinkage of the concrete. The B4-TW model extends and refines the B4 model so that the parameter values of the two models are almost the same and are given in [
28]. However, the B4 model used a ratio of water to cement to calculate the parameters and is adjusted to improve the prediction for concrete using mineral admixtures, whereas the B4-TW model used a water to cementitious materials ratio to directly determine the values of the parameters. Additionally, the B4-TW model extends new parameters in the formulae of creep and shrinkage.
Z. P. Bažant [
38] indicated that the values of creep and shrinkage are influenced by many factors which may be divided into intrinsic and extrinsic. In this study, all the intrinsic factors were fixed, including the concrete mix parameters, such as the elastic modulus of aggregate, the type of cement and admixtures, the raw materials content, and the maximum aggregate size, as well as the compressive strength. Hence, the comparison between the B4 model and the B4-TW model is only based on the extrinsic factors, which can be altered after casting, including the loading age, curing time, and relative humidity.
Table 8 presents the major creep parameters of two the models and the main different shrinkage parameters of the B4 model and the B4-TW model are listed in
Table 9.
5.6.1. Comparison with Prediction Models for Creep
As can be seen in
Table 8, the value of compliance parameters
q2,
q3 and
q4, which are factors that affect the basic creep value, predicted by the empirical formula of the B4 model was higher than the value calculated based on the B4-TW model. Therefore, the B4 model gave much higher—from 54 to 57%—long-time values of basic creep compliance than those of the B4-TW model at 375 days after different loading ages, as illustrated in
Figure 13a,b. When the specimens were loaded at 14 days and 28 days, the basic creep value of the B4-TW model was also consistent with the experiment data in comparison with the B4 model and the error attained by the B4-TW model was only −7% and −8% for basic creep specimens, respectively.
However, the B4-TW model gave a higher contribution of drying creep than the B4 model because the parameter
q5—that controls the magnitude of the drying creep compliance—calculated by B4-TW model, is 1.84 times higher than for the B4 model. Furthermore, the instantaneous strain
q1, which is closely related to the elastic modulus value, estimated by the B4-TW model, is also larger than that estimated by the B4 model (give in
Table 8). These lead to similar predictions for the total creep compliance by both the B4 model and the B4-TW model, as illustrated in
Figure 13c,d, although the basic creep compliance of the two models are different. It also can be observed that the prediction values for the models were only consistent with the test data of short-term total creep under 100 days but higher than those of the long-term total creep with various loading ages. The total creep compliance at loading age of 14 and 28 days obtained by B4-TW model is higher than the experimental results by 19% and 34%, while these values of B4 model are 22% and 32%, respectively.
The comparisons between the measured creep compliance of concrete and the prediction values of models B4, B4-TW at 375 days after applied stress are listed in
Table 10.
5.6.2. Comparison with Prediction Models for Shrinkage
The autogenous shrinkage results obtained by the B4-TW model were much higher than the test data for both the confined concrete (C-CFT-AS14 specimen) and the plain concrete curing in moist conditions (C-SCC-LW14 specimen), as observed in
Figure 14. Whereas the B4 model does not predict the autogenous shrinkage of concrete with Type II Portland cement (slow hardening) because the final autogenous shrinkage halftime
εau∞ of B4 model is equal to zero, as given in
Table 9.
The total shrinkage of specimens with a curing age of 14 days (C-SCC-TS14) and 28 days (P-SCC-TS28) are compared to the values of the B4 and B4-TW prediction models, as shown in
Figure 15. Both prediction values are overestimated and it implies that the B4 and B4-TW models may not applicable to SCC with expansive additives. The main reason is that the empirical formula of the B4 model does not consider SCC using the slow hardening cement type in autogenous shrinkage. Additionally, the theoretical final shrinkage for drying at zero ambient humidity
εsh∞ for the B4 model is also less than that of the B4-TW model, as shown in
Table 9.
In the study, the SCC was used to fill the steel tube but the shrinkage of the SCC is higher than the plain concrete due to its higher amount of paste and lower water-to-binder ratio. The addition of expansive additive to the SCC in the CFT is common to prevent the gap caused by significant autogenous shrinkage. However, the experiment shrinkage also showed large divergences in comparison with the predicted values of the models, as presented in
Table 11. The results indicate that the B4 model and the B4-TW model are inconsistent with the experimental shrinkage of the SCC, especially when using an expansive additive. Therefore, it is necessary to develop an appropriate prediction model to be applied for SCC.