INTECIN   20395
INSTITUTO DE TECNOLOGIAS Y CIENCIAS DE LA INGENIERIA "HILARIO FERNANDEZ LONG"
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Performance Dependent Model for Normal and High Strength Concretes
Autor/es:
FOLINO, P; ETSE, G
Revista:
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOLIDS AND STRUCTURES
Editorial:
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Referencias:
Lugar: San Diego; Año: 2012 vol. 49 p. 701 - 719
ISSN:
0020-7683
Resumen:
A new constitutive formulation, the so-called Performance Dependent Model valid for normal and high strength concretes is presented. The distinctive aspect of the proposed model is the consideration of relevant properties of concrete mix components in the evaluation of the involved material performance or quality at the macroscopic stand point. In this way, the composite features of concrete are appropriately taken into account.The model maximum strength surface is de fined by means of the Performance Dependent Failure Criterion proposed by the authors in previous works. Concrete behaviors in pre and post peak regimes are modeled with a non uniform hardening law and an isotropic softening rule, respectively. To realistically reproduce the concrete ductility in pre and post peak regimes under di fferent load scenarios, the hardening and softening laws are de ned in terms of the acting con ning pressure. Concrete dilatancy behavior is approached by means of a volumetric non associative fow rule. The softening law is embedded in fracture energy concepts for mode I and II types of failure. The model considers two main input material parameters: the uniaxial compressive strength and the performance parameter, a quality index defi ned in the context of the Performance Dependent Failure Criterion.The proposed constitutive model is able to capture the substantial differences in the failure behavior of normal and high strength concretes as well as of concretes with the same compressive strength but di fferent mix components. The predictive capabilities of the model are demonstrated in the numerical analyses included in this paper where the numerical predictions are compared with experimental results related to concrete specimens of different qualities and subjected to stress histories under both compressive and tensile regimes.