Abstract

The study investigated the corrosion resistance, corrosion micro-mechanisms, and the uniaxial compression stress–strain constitutive relationship of high-performance concrete (HPC) specimens subjected to long-term brine corrosion in an underground salt lake environment (Xining, China), which possesses a salt content of 180894.5mg/L. A three-dimensional random aggregate concrete meso-model was established considering the mesostructural characteristics of concrete. The mechanical behavior of HPC was assessed using the LS-DYNA software platform. The findings indicated that both the compressive strength and the dynamic elastic modulus of HPC demonstrated a pattern of initial increase, followed by a decrease, with extended brine exposure. Nevertheless, after 10 years of exposure to salt lake brine, the compressive strength of the HPC samples was still considerably greater than their original strength, with minimal evident corrosion damage to the concrete. Physical and chemical corrosion products formed exclusively in the spherical pores created by the air-entraining agent within the shallow layer of HPC, without notable micro-cracks or spalling. The HPC specimens exposed to brine for ten years under uniaxial compression load exhibited typical characteristics of splitting failure. In addition, the results from the mesoscopic numerical simulations aligned well with the experimental findings. The study shows that the three-dimensional random aggregate concrete mesoscopic model can simulate the uniaxial compressive mechanical behavior of HPC specimens under long-term corrosion conditions.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call