Abstract

Concrete is a multi-phase, multi-component, heterogeneous composite material and a typical porous medium with a complex microstructure. Under freeze-thaw cycles (FTCs), pressures from the freezing and migration of water within the pores of the concrete cause freeze-thaw damage, which is influenced by its microstructure. To effectively simulate and understand the freeze-thaw damage mechanism, it is crucial to use a geometric structure that reflects the actual pore distribution. This study employs the μic model to create a geometric structure of hardened cement paste, capturing the spatial distribution of pores. The study utilizes the peridynamics (PD) method based on ice formation and crystallization thermodynamics to investigate the freeze-thaw damage evolution and the deterioration of mechanical properties in cement paste under FTCs. The simulations revealed the entire freeze-thaw damage process of cement paste, including internal crack initiation and propagation, as well as surface freeze-thaw spalling. The freeze-thaw damage of cement paste intensifies with increasing FTCs, and the extension of cracks diminishes the interconnection among the skeletons constituting the cement paste microstructure, leading to decreased tensile strength and elastic modulus. Additionally, the stress-strain evolution behavior of freeze-thaw cement paste under uniaxial tensile loads was obtained. The tensile strength and elastic modulus of cement paste decrease with increasing FTCs, and the higher the water-cement (w/c) ratio, the greater the reduction in strength and modulus.

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