1. Introduction
The application of concrete with increasingly higher compressive strengths enables the realisation of more slender concrete structures. Compared to massive structures, these slender structures are exposed to fatigue-relevant loads to a higher extent because of their lower ratio of deadweight to non-static loads. Moreover, special structures, such as wind energy plants or machine foundations, are generally exposed to fatigue loading with huge numbers of load cycles. Both the development of concrete types with increasingly higher compressive strengths and the expanded construction of wind energy plants have led to a growth of research activities in the field of the fatigue resistance of concrete in the last few decades. After focusing mainly on the number of cycles to failure, the latest research is especially focused on the concrete fatigue behaviour or rather damage development [
1,
2], which can be described by different damage indicators, such as strain, stiffness and, as an innovative experimental approach, acoustic emission (AE). However, only a little knowledge is currently available concerning the characteristics of the ongoing damage processes in concrete.
It is well-known that high-strength concrete has a denser binder matrix with increased compressive strength and a less pronounced and improved interfacial transition zone. Both properties lead to an improved microstructure. However, the influence of this improved microstructure and the presence of coarse aggregate on the fatigue behaviour under compressive fatigue loading has not yet been understood entirely.
Mehmel and Kern [
3] investigated the fatigue behaviour of a normal strength concrete and cement stone comparatively. They defined the coarse aggregates as “solid phase” and the cement stone as “viscose phase”, and found that the interaction between these phases or, rather, the inhomogeneous stress distribution induced affects the fatigue behaviour of concrete to a high extent. Shah and Chandra [
4] also observed that the interaction between the coarse aggregates and the cement stone is essential for the damage mechanisms under fatigue loading. The results of Thiele [
2] for a normal strength concrete confirm the strong effect of the inhomogeneous three-dimensional stress distribution with a diffuse, spread compressive damaging effect in the cement matrix, and a localised, vertically orientated tensile damage. The big influence of the inhomogeneous stress distribution induced by coarse aggregates together with a strong stress level dependency of the compressive fatigue behaviour could be shown for high-strength concrete compositions in [
5].
The modelling of concrete, including its complex material and damage behaviour, has reached a highly advanced state for monotonically increasing external loads. In the case of fatigue loading, the cyclic increase in damage, which additionally depends on, for example, the maximum and minimum stress level and the load frequency, has to be comprised by the computational model. Material models, such as a Drucker–Prager–Cap model [
6] or microplane models [
7], combined with classical damage approaches are, in most cases, unsuitable for fatigue simulations because damage generally reaches a state of saturation after a few cycles and further cycles do not lead to further damage and finally, fracture of the material. Consequently, during the last few decades, the mechanical and numerical modelling of fatigue has generally been based on phenomenological model assumptions, such as the well-known Paris law, which was used explicitly as part of the models. This means that a specific increase in damage or a particular crack increment prescribed by Paris law is assumed for every load cycle and the actual damage mechanisms in the background are not scrutinised. Such an approach, however, does not allow one to describe the fatigue damage behaviour in terms of a predictive model, which is applicable independently of the external load.
In addition to the phenomenological modelling of fatigue, a few damage models were developed especially for fatigue problems [
8]. These models, however, may show weaknesses in non-cyclic applications. In the context of phase-field modelling, [
9,
10,
11] recently proposed the idea of locally reducing the strength of the material depending on the local development of the strain and its accumulation. As a result, the entire strain history may have an influence on the remaining strength of the material. The results presented in [
11] showed very good agreement with experimental observations not only for the Paris regime (phase II) but also for phase I and III of the well-known macroscopic s-shaped strain development [
1,
12]. In this paper, an extension of the approach presented in [
11] is proposed regarding a damage model based on gradient-enhanced strains, where the reduction in the strength of the material is captured in a modification of the yield function for the critical gradient-enhanced equivalent strain.
The general challenge in developing and validating computational models is the limited knowledge regarding the important material behaviour patterns and their interpretation on a small length scale leading to the observable macroscopic material behaviour. This particularly concerns those models that can be applied to simulate the complex processes of fatigue damage accumulation in concrete’s microstructure. A close cooperation between researchers in computational mechanics and materials science is essential in this case.
A conjoint research project, which is part of the DFG Priority Programme SPP 2020 ‘Cyclic Deterioration of High-Performance Concrete in an Experimental-Virtual Lab’, investigated the compressive fatigue behaviour of high-strength concrete and mortar experimentally and numerically. In this paper, the numbers of cycles to failure and the damage indicators strain, stiffness and AE are analysed comparatively for a high-strength concrete and its corresponding mortar. Furthermore, a new modelling approach for the simulation of the concrete and mortar’s fatigue behaviour is described and the numerical results received are presented comparatively and discussed with the fatigue behaviour determined experimentally.
4. Computational Modelling
A finite element model was set up to predict the fatigue behaviour of different concrete mesostructures. Accordingly, the weak form of the balance of momentum is required, which reads
where
is the stress tensor,
is the variation of the strain tensor,
is the external traction vector,
is the variation of the displacement vector or the virtual displacement,
is the mass density and
is the acceleration vector. The material model for the basalt aggregate and the mortar was chosen to be isotropic linear elastic including an isotropic damage model based on gradient-enhanced equivalent strains. An additional fatigue model was employed to reduce the remaining strength of the material depending on the deformation history. The stress tensor is computed by
with
The material parameters
and
are the Lamé constants,
is the strain tensor and
is the damage variable, which is calculated according to the damage model by Mazars and Pijaudier-Cabot [
19].
This damage model is frequently applied for concrete. Here, α and β are parameters to adjust the shape of the damage function and
is an initial value for the history variable
. If
is larger than
then damage starts to increase. A gradient-enhanced equivalent strain measure [
20] was used for the formulation of the yield condition required to determine the internal variable
to avoid mesh dependence of the solution. The gradient-enhanced equivalent strain measure
is a global scalar field quantity and results from the solution of the weak form of the inhomogeneous Helmholtz equation
where
is the so-called characteristic length and
is a scalar valued function of the strain tensor
, which can be used to account for the different damage behaviour under tension compared to the damage behaviour under compression. The so-called modified von Mises criterion is employed [
21],
which was used for concrete in [
22]. Here,
is Poisson’s ratio,
is the first invariant of the strain tensor and
is the second invariant of the strain deviator. The parameter
can be used to weigh the different contributions of volumetric and deviatoric parts of the strain tensor. Here,
was set to
= 10 for all simulations. The damage criterion in Equation (10) was used to calculate the update of the history variable
. This usually rather simple condition is formulated as an inequality.
If , then damage does not change. If the gradient-enhanced equivalent strain yields values such that , then needs to be adjusted such that and, thus, damage increases.
Employing such a damage model in a fatigue simulation would quickly lead to a saturation of the local damage after only a few load cycles and fatigue damage would not accumulate. Recently, [
9,
10,
11] proposed an extension of a classical phase-field model for the simulation of fracture processes. Within that model, the critical energy release rate that needs to be exceeded to obtain crack propagation was reduced according to a monotonically increasing accumulated equivalent strain measure. For fatigue simulations, this model extension can be interpreted as a reduction in the local strength of the material progressing with the number of load cycles. This model was adopted for the gradient-enhanced damage model presented here. One of the possible reduction functions for the critical energy release rate presented in [
11] as a suitable function to simulate not only the initial damage processes but also the stable damage-growth phase of fatigue (phase II) is
The parameter
can be regarded as a parameter to set the strain history-dependent rate of strength reduction in the material. The parameter
is a threshold value for
beyond which the strength of the material is reduced. The scalar valued field variable
describes the accumulated history of the strain and is only allowed to grow monotonically, i.e.,
. There are multiple possibilities of the definition of this variable. Some of them are described in [
11] in the case of a phase-field formulation. Here,
is set to
where
is the Heaviside function. By this choice, regarding cyclic loading, only the loading part contributes to the increase in
and not the unloading part, which corresponds to experimental results documented in literature (e.g., [
23]). Furthermore, Equation (12) guarantees a monotonic decrease in the strength of the material. The reduction function
(Equation (11)) now still needs to be included in the yield function for the history variable
.
This eventually means that the threshold value for
, beyond which damage increases, decreases cycle by cycle. This is not identical to the approach of [
11], where the critical energy release rate value is reduced by the function
. However, simulation results show that the same effect can be achieved by introducing the modified yield function
. It needs to be emphasised that this model does not rely on phenomenological assumptions based on the Paris law. Quite contrary to that, it is possible to predict the damage growth during the initial damage phase, the Paris regime and the unstable damage growth phase by applying the model.
6. Summary and Conclusions
The results from experimental and numerical investigations on a high-strength concrete and its corresponding mortar subjected to compressive fatigue loading with two stress levels are presented in this paper. The concrete reached similar numbers of cycles to failure as the mortar at the higher stress level but higher numbers of cycles to failure at the lower stress level. Comparing the results for the concrete and mortar, the total growth of strain is smaller and the gradient in phase II is flatter for the concrete. However, the gradient of stiffness of the concrete is steeper at the higher stress level but flatter at the lower stress level, indicating a negative effect of the basalt coarse aggregate on the reduction in stiffness at the higher stress level. Furthermore, larger AE activity was determined for the concrete compared to the mortar and, thus, must be traced back to the presence of coarse aggregate. A stepwise increased AE activity in the concrete at the lower stress level indicates damage processes on a very small scale (perhaps on a sub-microscale), which are not visible in the macroscopic damage indicators. The characteristics of the AE signals will be analysed in more detail in further analyses in order to obtain more knowledge about the damage processes.
The experimental results presented in this paper demonstrate the existence of differences between the fatigue behaviour of concretes and mortars due to the presence of coarse aggregate. It is assumed that the highly fatigue-resistant coarse aggregate in the concrete relieves the stresses in the fatigue-sensitive mortar at lower stress levels. However, at the higher stress level, indication exists that the coarse aggregate has a negative effect on the concrete’s fatigue behaviour (higher stiffness degradation) compared to that of the mortar. This might be traced back to the inhomogeneous stress distribution induced due to the higher stresses applied and the higher resulting differences in the deformation behaviour of the coarse aggregate basalt and the mortar. Despite this, similar numbers of cycles to failure are reached. However, the influence of coarse aggregate and mortar matrix superimpose. The results in [
5] show that the ratio of the volume of mortar and aggregates in concrete specimens together with the damage sensitivity of the mortar, ratio of stiffness and the fatigue resistance of the aggregates lead to a certain fatigue behaviour of the concrete. This superimposition leads to less deviating strain developments and similar numbers of cycles to failure at the higher stress level, which seems to be a rather random result.
A newly developed model for the simulation of the strain development under compressive fatigue loading is presented in this paper. The comparison of the experimentally and computationally determined developments of strain reveal very good agreement. The numbers of cycles to failure and the characteristics of the strain developments are very well-depicted. Furthermore, the simulated numbers of cycles to failure result from the simulated fatigue damage development in the mesostructure, whereby the correlation of the slope of the strain development with the number of cycles to failure reached fits the experimental results very well. In contrast to damage models based on the assumption of the Paris law, the newly introduced computational model allows for the simulation of phases I, II and III of the fatigue damage process. A significant and remarkable advantage of the proposed model compared to most classical gradient-enhanced damage approaches is that it can be applied to simulations with monotonically increasing loading and fatigue simulations. The stress redistribution in the mesostructure due to damage can be visualised by applying the fatigue damage model presented. This can contribute to a better understanding of the damage processes within the concrete mesostructure.
The present model does not yet contain elastoplastic or viscoplastic material behaviour, which have a significant effect on the fatigue behaviour of concrete. Nevertheless, the results obtained are promising and the material model can be extended by plasticity models suitable for concrete, which will be the subject of future collaborative work. In addition to that, efficient computational techniques avoiding excessive computational effort can be applied for the simulation of large numbers of cycles at lower stress levels in the future.