Abstract

In order to study the fracture behavior of hydraulic concrete, wedge splitting tests are performed on notched cubic concrete specimens with different crack-depth ratios (0.3, 0.4, and 0.5). Meanwhile, acoustic emission and the digital image correlation method were used to monitor the crack propagation. Test results show that the initiation toughness of the hydraulic concrete specimen is independent of the crack-depth ratio. As the crack-depth ratio increases, the fracture toughness, the fracture energy, and the critical crack length decrease. The AE cumulative counts and hits can reflect not only the four-stages fracture process of hydraulic concrete but also the boundary effect of hydraulic concrete. The acoustic emission b value can reflect the two stages of postpeak damage of the hydraulic concrete. The length of fictitious crack, the propagation velocity of macrocrack and effective crack length decrease with the increase of the initial notch depth ratio. The effective crack length increases with the increase in the maximum aggregate size, and the growth time increases with the maximum aggregate size and an effective height of the specimen.

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