Abstract
Shear experiments were conducted on the cement mortar–sandstone bonding interface and the materials themselves to investigate their loss of shear strength and the deterioration mechanism caused by freezing and thawing cycles. The experimental results show that the shear strength of the bonding interface is much lower than that of the original materials themselves under the same normal stress. The shear strength of this interface decreases linearly with increasing number of freeze–thaw cycles, but it linearly increases with increasing normal stress. The cohesion and internal friction angle also decrease as the number of freeze–thaw cycles increases. In addition, obvious freeze–thaw debonding of this interface is observed and it is first caused by the difference in frost-heaving deformation between the cement mortar and the red sandstone, followed by the frost-heaving pressure in the crack formed in the interface. Finally, the shear damage of this interface has been quantified by reconstitution of the interface morphology. As a result, almost all the shear breakage occurs on the red sandstone side, and a concave rough face arises. With the absence of normal stress, the shear abscission area in the red sandstone increases quickly with increasing number of freeze–thaw cycles. However, with increasing normal stress, this shear abscission area decreases, and the layered composite specimens were prone to shear failure straightly along the bonding interface, because the shear dilatancy deformation is constrained. This study provides the shear failure characteristics of cement mortar–rock interfaces under freeze–thaw cycles and contributes to a better understanding of the freeze–thaw debonding mechanism of protective cement mortar layers on rock surfaces.
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