Abstract

To investigate the stress distribution in recycled aggregate concrete (RAC) under uniaxial compression, modeled recycled aggregate concrete (MRAC) was studied by numerical simulation. The mechanical properties of interfacial transition zones (ITZs) of RAC were measured by the nanoindentation technique. A two-dimensional numerical study of the stress distribution characteristics of MRAC under the uniaxial compression is presented. The simulation was verified by experimental results. A parametric analysis is then conducted to study the sensitivity of each phase’s mechanical properties and the amounts of old cement mortar in the MRAC. Simulation results demonstrate that a concentration of tensile stress and shear stress appears around new and old ITZ regions. It is found that when the elastic modulus of natural aggregates increases, the magnitude of tensile stress concentration becomes higher, whereas as the elastic modulus of ITZs increases, the magnitude of stress concentration decreases. It is also shown that the higher relative elastic modulus of new cement mortar compared with that of the old cement mortar significantly reduces the stress concentrations at the regions between recycled coarse aggregate particles. The amount of old cement mortar affects the stress distribution in the new ITZ much more obviously than that in the old ITZ.

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