Abstract

Manufactured sand (MS) was used to partially replace the traditional quartz sand (QS) to prepare a novel ultra-high-performance manufactured sand concrete (UHPMC). To better understand the fracture damage mechanism of UHPMC, small-scale sample tensile tests were conducted to investigate the tensile behavior of three types of UHPMC (low strain hardening, low strain softening and high strain softening). Acoustic emission (AE) and digital image correlation (DIC) are employed simultaneously to monitor and assess the damage characteristics of UHPMC. The results indicate that the classical AE characteristic parameters (ringing counts, duration and b-value) provide a satisfactory result in identifying the feature stages of low strain hardening and high strain softening. Based on the Gaussian mixture model (GMM) and support vector machine (SVM), an automatic probability classification algorithm has been developed that achieves the quantitative categorization of three UHPMC cracking types (shear or tensile cracks). Among them, tensile damage is dominant during the entire loading process, whereas shear damage, including aggregate dislocation and fiber debonding and pullout, accumulates during the hardening and softening stages. DIC visualization and AE source localization complement each other in identifying crack distribution, contributing to further revealing the tensile damage mechanism of UHPMC. The results obtained in this study can provide data and theoretical support for fracture damage characterization and health monitoring of ultra-high-performance concrete materials under tensile conditions.

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