4.7 Article

Thermal displacements of concrete dams: Accounting for water temperature in statistical models

Journal

ENGINEERING STRUCTURES
Volume 91, Issue -, Pages 26-39

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.engstruct.2015.01.047

Keywords

Concrete dams; Structural health monitoring; Thermal effects; Statistical analysis; Finite element method; Pendulum displacements

Funding

  1. 3SR part of LabEx Tec 21 (Investissements d'Avenir) [ANR-11-LABX-0030]

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Measurements of concrete dam displacements are influenced by various factors such as hydrostatic load, thermal effect and irreversible phenomena (creep, swelling, etc.). To interpret measurements and improve the assessment of irreversible effects, splitting the different influences is necessary. For this purpose, models based on statistics and physics are commonly employed in engineering studies. Although they are efficient in most cases to analyse the displacement of concrete dams, these models are built on a certain number of hypotheses, necessary to write simple mathematical relationships, but leading to uncertainties. To evaluate the suitability of these physico-statistical models (importance of the hypotheses) and to improve it, a 2D finite element (FE) model has been developed as a heuristic case. This study shows the importance of water temperature and temperature gradient in the assessment of the thermal displacements. So, a new physico-statistical model is proposed to account for these phenomena. The evaluation of its performance on both the FE heuristic case and real cases shows that the improved assessment of thermal effects on reversible phenomena leads to a reduced uncertainty on residuals. Thus, the proposed approach yields to a better assessment of irreversible trends. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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