4.5 Article

Strain of heated concrete during two thermal cycles. Part 1: strain over two cycles, during first heating and at subsequent constant temperature

Journal

MAGAZINE OF CONCRETE RESEARCH
Volume 58, Issue 6, Pages 367-385

Publisher

THOMAS TELFORD PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1680/macr.2006.58.6.367

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This paper presents the strain behaviour of three nuclear reactor type plain unsealed (50-60 N/mm(2)) concretes exposed under 0% and 20% compressive loads to a 14-day two-thermal-cycle test (test temperatures ranging from 100 degrees C to 600 degrees C). A generic approach is taken for wider application and for the in-depth understanding of the behaviour of heated concrete in general. Concrete during the two thermal cycles experiences both expansive and contractive strains. The former includes 'thermal expansion, cracking expansion and chemically induced expansion. The latter includes drying shrinkage, load-induced thermal strain (LITS) during virgin heating, 'delayed' LITS at constant temperature and time-dependent creep. The overall strains during heating, at constant temperature and during cooling reflect both contractive and expansive influences. LITS is absent during cooling and a second heat cycle. A summary of the influences of material and environmental factors upon the thermal strain and LITS of concrete is given indicating first-order, second-order and negligible influences. The role of the thermal instability of concrete depends upon the constituents, and specifically the aggregate type. It is found to be very significant, manifesting itself in crack development and large expansive strains and is most evident when heating/cooling without load to temperatures above 300-400 degrees C. A five-day period at constant temperature following the thermal transient (1 degrees C/min) reveals shrinkage, creep and expansive strains dependent upon temperature-load level and concrete type, emanating from continuation of physico-chemical transformations. The largest strain contribution at constant temperature is from the end of the heating ramp (up to 10 h) to about one day after start of heating. The test regime provided a wider insight into the nature of heated concrete.

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