Moisture content effect on the creep behavior of loess for the catastrophic Baqiao landslide

CATENA ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 187 ◽  
pp. 104371 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xingang Wang ◽  
Jiading Wang ◽  
Hongbin Zhan ◽  
Ping Li ◽  
Haijun Qiu ◽  
...  
Bauingenieur ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 93 (03) ◽  
pp. 95-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Drexel ◽  
Y. Theiner ◽  
G. Hofstetter

Im vorliegenden Beitrag wird ein umfangreiches Versuchsprogramm zum Schwinden und Kriechen unter Druckbeanspruchung eines Betons der Festigkeitsklasse C 30/37 vorgestellt. An versiegelten und unversiegelten zylindrischen Probekörpern wurde die zeitliche Entwicklung (i) der autogenen Schwinddehnungen, (ii) der kombinierten autogenen Schwind- und Trocknungsschwinddehnungen, (iii) der totalen Dehnungen von im Alter von zwei, sieben und 28 Tagen mit 30 % der jeweiligen Druckfestigkeit belasteten Probekörpern und (iv) des Feuchtegehalts der Schwind- und Kriechprobekörper ermittelt. Dadurch konnte der Einfluss der Druckbelastung auf den Feuchtegehalt in Abhängigkeit des Betonalters bei Belastungsbeginn sowie der Einfluss des Feuchteaustausches zwischen Probekörper und trockenerer Umgebungsluft auf das Kriechen (Pickett-Effekt) und Schwinden von Beton untersucht werden. Zusätzlich wurde die Desorptionsisotherme für fünf verschiedene Werte der relativen Luftfeuchtigkeit ermittelt sowie die zeitliche Entwicklung der Druckfestigkeit und des Elastizitätsmoduls jeweils an bis zur Prüfung versiegelten Probekörpern bestimmt.


Author(s):  
Ying-dan Zhu ◽  
Nan Fu ◽  
Dong Li ◽  
Li-jun Wang ◽  
Xiao Dong Chen

Abstract:The study is conducted to investigate the physical and viscoelastic properties of the highland barley kernels in different moisture content range from 10.1 %% to 20.5 %% (w.b.). Highland barley kernel samples were selected with physical properties in terms of length, width, thickness, 1000-kernel weight, volume, geometric and arithmetic mean diameter changing in linear trends. By using a dynamic mechanical analyzer, the 4-element Burgers model was found to adequately represent the creep behavior of the highland barley kernels (R2> 0.977). The creep behavior of the ventral groove and dorsal side was also matched perfectly with Burgers model (R2> 0.946). The creep behavior of these kernels at long-time frame was studied applying time-temperature superposition (TTS). TTS method was successfully used to predict the creep behavior of these kernels at longer frame of time. TheTgvalues for the kernels decreased with increasing moisture content. TheTgvalues for the kernels at the moisture contents of 10.1 %%and 20.5 %% were 114.33 °C and 67.95 °C, respectively. The magnitude of the storage modulus, loss tangent and their change rates with frequency were maximum at 10.1 %% and minimum at 20.5 %% moisture contents.


Holzforschung ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 60 (3) ◽  
pp. 299-303 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chika Takahashi ◽  
Yutaka Ishimaru ◽  
Ikuho Iida ◽  
Yuzo Furuta

Abstract The creep of wood increases remarkably during moisture changes, a phenomenon called mechano-sorptive creep. The microstructure in cell walls of wood is destabilized by changes in temperature and/or moisture content. The mechanical properties of destabilized wood change over long periods of time. In the present study, the influence of moisture conditioning history on bending creep was examined. During changes in moisture, greater creep occurred in wood subjected to the first moisture change after long-term moisture conditioning than immediately after desorption or adsorption. This result indicates a kind of memory effect immediately after moisture change. During desorption processes, greater creep occurred immediately after slow adsorption than immediately after rapid adsorption. In the course of adsorption, the reverse was observed: the creep was greater immediately after rapid desorption than immediately after slow desorption. Accordingly, greater instability immediately after a change in moisture does not always cause greater creep during the next moisture change. The size of the moisture change and the load level affect the recovery of creep during adsorption processes.


2019 ◽  
Vol 65 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andi Hermawan ◽  
Noboru Fujimoto

Abstract This study was conducted to investigate the rheological behavior of sugi boxed-heart timber under constant moisture content (MC) using a cantilever creep test. The focus of the study was the effect of temperature on viscoelastic creep behavior of surface- and inner-layer specimens of the timber. The specimens with dimensions of 75 mm in length, 25 mm wide, and 3 mm thick were prepared. A cantilever creep test with an effective span of 40 mm was conducted under a constant temperature of 20, 65, 80, and 95 °C. The equilibrium moisture content (EMC) of the specimens was set to around 12% at each temperature. A load representing 20% of rupture load of the specimens at each temperature was applied to their free-end and strain gauges were bonded at the fourth span (10 mm) on the upper and bottom surfaces of the specimens. Loading and unloading duration were set for 300 and 180 min, respectively, and a four-element Burgers model was used to model the creep behavior of the timber. It was found that temperature had significant effects on the creep properties of the timber. The surface strain and creep compliance of the surface- and inner-layer specimens tended to increase as the temperature increased. Creep compliance of the surface-layer specimen was higher than that of the inner-layer specimen at each temperature. Fitting the experimental data with the Burgers model used in this study shows good agreement and it was found that elastic (instantaneous) and viscoelastic (delayed) creep compliance of all the specimens tended to increase as the temperature increased. On the other hand, the viscosity of the dashpot element of both the Maxwell and the Kelvin unit tended to decrease as the temperature increased. Although different in magnitude, the creep-recovery compliance parameters had the same tendency as the creep compliance parameters.


1968 ◽  
Vol 19 (03/04) ◽  
pp. 423-429 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. M Thelin ◽  

SummaryA stable, lyophilized AHF reference plasma has been prepared from pooled plasma from at least 50 normal healthy donors and standardized against a primary standard of fresh plasma from 20 healthy male donors aged 20 to 40. Average AHF potency of a typical lot is 98.8%, and moisture content is less than 0.5%. Under storage at -25° C, this AHF reference plasma is stable for at least 18 months. It has been used in several major coagulation laboratories, and has given consistently satisfactory and reproducible results in AHF assays.


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