The Phenomenon of Cracking in Cement Concretes and Reinforced Concrete Structures: The Mechanism of Cracks Formation, Causes of Their Initiation, Types and Places of Occurrence, and Methods of Detection—A Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Mechanism of Cracking in Concrete Composites and the Main Concepts Related to This Issue
- The formation of voids;
- Reduction in the working cross-section of structural elements;
- Dissipation of energy in the form of heat and mechanical vibrations;
- The emergence of new surfaces.
- Local discontinuities;
- Breakages in the cohesion of the material;
- Damage caused in a continuous medium as a result of local exceedances in strength.
3. Causes of Damage and Cracks in Concrete
- The cause of the crack;
- Location in the structure;
- Width;
- Arrangement;
- The possibility of admission of the damaged element for use;
- Methods of observation.
- (A)
- Primary defects—resulting from the natural properties of the material or from design and execution errors.
- (B)
- Secondary defects—occurring during exploitation.
- (a)
- In the group of causes of natural material crack formation:
- Early thermal stresses occurring during the first several hours after formation of the concrete element;
- Concrete shrinkage resulting from the physico-chemical transformation of cement components;
- Material heterogeneity.
- (b)
- In the group of causes of cracks related to the applied reinforcement:
- Reinforcement surface condition;
- Adhesion of the applied reinforcement;
- Method of distribution of inserts in the cross-section of the element;
- Reinforcement diameters;
- Distance of the inserts from the edge of the element.
- (c)
- In the group of causes of cracks as a result of design errors:
- Faulty design assumptions for the working conditions of the structure;
- Loads incorrectly assumed by designers, e.g., omission of temperature loads;
- Improperly assumed conditions of construction execution;
- The insufficient knowledge of the designers;
- Calculation errors during project development;
- Negligence of the authors of the project.
- (d)
- In the group of causes of cracks as a result of technological and workmanship errors:
- Insufficient strength of materials and products;
- Poor quality of assembly and structural connections;
- Extended technological breaks in laying successive layers of concrete mix;
- Poor compaction and insufficient vibration of concrete in places of technological breaks;
- Too shallow and porous a covering of concrete reinforcement;
- Deviations from the project during implementation;
- The insufficient qualifications and knowledge of contractors;
- Insufficient supervision and cooperation with the designer;
- Negligence of contractors.
- (a)
- Errors during the use of the facility:
- Excessive and inadequate loads in relation to the design assumptions;
- Change in the static diagram or the purpose of the facility;
- Inadequate protection of the structure against the impact of the environment;
- Insufficient technical supervision over the operation;
- Insufficient knowledge of users.
- (b)
- Design errors:
- Improper foundation of the building;
- Insufficient number of expansion joints;
- Incorrectly designed damp insulation;
- Incorrectly designed roofing and terraces;
- Errors in structure dimensioning.
- (c)
- Execution errors:
- Use of materials with properties worse than designed;
- Negligent execution of works;
- Failure to comply with the correct technology of works, e.g., inappropriate selection of technology for work at low temperatures.
- (d)
- Aggressive impact of the external environment:
- Erosion and corrosion of concrete;
- Impact of moisture;
- Ground settlement;
- Shocks and vibrations;
- Lateral wind pressure on walls and roofs;
- Snow deposition on roofs and the influence of biological factors.
- (e)
- Exceptional loads:
- Excessive wind and snow loads;
- Gas explosions and technological failures;
- Fires and random damage;
- Seismic loads;
- Hurricanes;
- Floods.
4. Types of Microcracks and Cracks
4.1. Cracks in the Concrete Structure
- Dilatational cracks, i.e., those opening as a result of external loads, aggregate surface roughness, or internal water pressure;
- Cracks with contact friction when the pressed edges of the crack are slipping;
- Cracks with a cohesive layer between the edges of the crack;
- Cracks with the so-called “fracture process zone” at the top of the macrocrack caused by the development of plastic deformations or microcrack arrangements.
4.2. Cracks in Reinforced Concrete Structures
4.2.1. Macroscopic Image of Cracks in Reinforced Concrete Elements
- (a)
- Cracks from tension:
- (b)
- Cracks from bending:
- (c)
- Cracks due to shear:
- (d)
- Cracks due to torsion:
- (e)
- Summary and comparison of macroscopic crack morphology in reinforced concrete elements:
4.2.2. Characteristics of Microcracks Correlated with the Type of Stresses Occurring in the Damaged Element
5. Detection and Observation of Cracks and Microcracks in Concrete
5.1. The Core of the Problem in the Field of Concrete Cracking Research
- Cracks on the concrete surface;
- Microcracks located inside the concrete structure.
5.2. Diagnostics of Surface Cracks
- Thermographic methods;
- Digital image correlation (DIC).
5.3. Detection of Structural Microcracks
5.3.1. General Division of the Diagnostic Methods Used
5.3.2. Radiographic Methods
5.3.3. Microscopic Observations
5.3.4. Methods Using Acoustic Waves
- Micro-cracking before the main fracture;
- The main fracture;
- After main fracture.
5.3.5. Methods Based on Interferometry Phenomena
5.3.6. Methods Using Tomographs
5.3.7. Other Effective Methods Used for the Detection and Analysis of Microcracks
- Fuzzy sets;
- Approximate sets;
- Artificial neural networks;
- Machine learning;
- Evolutionary calculations;
- Genetic algorithms;
- Artificial life;
- Robotics.
- They provide very accurate measurement results;
- They minimize the costs of additional monitoring of the cracking process in the structure by reducing the need to use it;
- They reduce the time needed to carry out the diagnostic process;
- They can minimize the number of sudden failures resulting from uncontrolled cracking development because they provide accurate, specific, and invisible data in real time, e.g., data related to the development of the microcracking process in the material structure or the corrosion of reinforcing bars in a reinforced concrete element.
5.4. Conclusions Resulting from the Review of Methods Used to Detect Cracks and Microcracks in Concrete Elements
- It should be relatively economical;
- It should detect defects quickly;
- It should be characterized by high resolution, i.e., capable of detecting very small microcracks;
- It should provide quantitative information readily associated with an image analysis system.
6. Final Remarks
- Primary defects—resulting from the natural properties of the material or from design and execution errors;
- Secondary defects—occurring during construction exploitation.
- In tensioned elements, microcracks are usually rectilinear in shape and occur primarily in the ITZ area (Figure 9a);
- In shear elements, there are wing-type microcracks with straight wings that deviate at different angles from the plane of the straight section of the microcrack (Figure 9b);
- Torsional stresses cause changes in wing microcrack morphology. While twisting, the tips of the wings are twisted, and the concrete at the connection with the straight part of the microcrack, i.e., places of stress concentration, is evidently crushed (Figure 9c).
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. | Group of Analyzed Factors | Types of Analyzed Factors |
---|---|---|
1 | Material |
|
2 | Technological |
|
3 | Service |
|
No. | Type of Crack | Characteristics |
---|---|---|
1 | Type-I microcrack | Cracks developed completely along the outline of coarse aggregates. |
2 | Type-II microcrack | Cracks developed along the outline of coarse aggregates but there was a phenomenon whereby the bangs cut through the corners of the coarse aggregates. |
3 | Type-III microcrack | Cracks developed along the outline of coarse aggregates but there was a phenomenon whereby the crack cut through the center of the coarse aggregates. |
4 | Type-I crack | The development direction of the crack was entirely along the outline of the coarse aggregates, and the cracks were relatively slender. |
5 | Type-II crack | The development direction of the cracks was basically along the outline of the coarse aggregates but there was a phenomenon whereby the cracks cut through the corner of the coarse aggregate, and the cracks were relatively slender. |
6 | Type-III crack | The development direction of the cracks was not completely along the outline of the coarse aggregates. The cracks directly cut through the center of the coarse aggregate, and the cracks were thicker. |
7 | Type-IV crack | Crack development followed the outline of the coarse aggregates, causing fragmentation in the area where fine aggregates gathered. The fragmentation was mainly strip-shaped or block-shaped. |
No. | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Type of Crack | Type-I microcrack | Type-II microcrack | Type-III microcrack | Type-I crack | Type-II crack | Type-III crack | Type-IV crack |
Examples |
Interaction Causing Formation of Crack | Crack Characteristics |
---|---|
Tension |
|
Bending |
|
Shear |
|
Torsion |
|
Method | Advantage | Disadvantage |
---|---|---|
Thermal imaging |
|
|
DIC |
|
|
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Golewski, G.L. The Phenomenon of Cracking in Cement Concretes and Reinforced Concrete Structures: The Mechanism of Cracks Formation, Causes of Their Initiation, Types and Places of Occurrence, and Methods of Detection—A Review. Buildings 2023, 13, 765. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13030765
Golewski GL. The Phenomenon of Cracking in Cement Concretes and Reinforced Concrete Structures: The Mechanism of Cracks Formation, Causes of Their Initiation, Types and Places of Occurrence, and Methods of Detection—A Review. Buildings. 2023; 13(3):765. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13030765
Chicago/Turabian StyleGolewski, Grzegorz Ludwik. 2023. "The Phenomenon of Cracking in Cement Concretes and Reinforced Concrete Structures: The Mechanism of Cracks Formation, Causes of Their Initiation, Types and Places of Occurrence, and Methods of Detection—A Review" Buildings 13, no. 3: 765. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13030765