Abstract

Cement-soil mortar is a composite material that provides an efficient and cost-effective solution for a wide range of construction applications. This study analyzes the mechanical properties of cement-soil mortar through experimental investigation and explores the application and parameter calibration of the Concrete Damage Plasticity (CDP) model in the finite element simulation of cement-soil mortar. Additionally, an innovative Initial Defect Generation (IDG) method is proposed to enhance the accuracy in simulation of failure mode. The research findings provide a simulation framework that balances simplicity and accuracy for cement-soil mortar. Uniaxial compressive tests are first conducted on cement-soil mortar specimens with water contents ranging from 40 % to 70 %, and cement-to-soil proportions from 30 % to 300 %. Based on the experimental results, the regression relationships correlating unconfined compressive strength (UCS) with elastic modulus, peak strain and stress-strain curves are established. Then, the simplified equations for calculating CDP model parameters from the UCS of cement-soil mortar are further proposed following damage mechanics. A parameter table summarizing the calculation methods for all relevant CDP parameters is provided to streamline the model calibration process. Simulations incorporating the simplified calibration method and IDG method successfully replicated the stress-strain responses and failure modes observed in uniaxial compressive strength tests of cement-soil specimens with varied strength. The results demonstrate the reliability and broad applicability of this simulation framework in predicting the mechanical performance of cement-soil mortar.

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