scholarly journals Effects of temperature gradients on elastic modulus and compression strength of the saturated frozen clay

2009 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 420-424 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiao-dong Zhao ◽  
Guo-qing Zhou ◽  
Cai Wei ◽  
Xiao-jun Li
Author(s):  
Konstantin I Matveev

Helmholtz resonators and their modifications are commonly applied for suppressing unwanted sound, including acoustic oscillations in chambers of propulsion and power systems. Sound absorption characteristics of Helmholtz resonators can be enhanced and controlled with a use of thermal stratification in porous insets inside resonators. A simplified lumped-element model for thermoacoustically augmented Helmholtz resonators is developed in this article. Sample calculations illustrate effects of temperature gradients, porosity, positions of porous insets, and locations of resonators inside chambers.


2009 ◽  
Vol 40 (7) ◽  
pp. 1154-1159 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Spennagallo ◽  
L. Codecasa ◽  
D. D’Amore ◽  
P. Maffezzoni

2012 ◽  
Vol 238 ◽  
pp. 161-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qing Long Wang ◽  
Jun Chao Bao

A designed experimental study has been conducted to investigate the effect of silica fume on mechanical properties and carbonation resistance of concrete, a large number of experiments have been carried out in this study. The results indicate that the addition of silica fume has improved the compression strength and elastic modulus of concrete. A considerable increase for the compression strength and elastic modulus of the concrete was observed by increasing the dosage of silica fume. Besides, the addition of silica fume can improve the carbonation resistance of the concrete composite evidently, and the carbonation resistance is becoming better and better as the silica fume content is increasing gradually.


This paper examines the impacts of substitution of reused concrete sand (RCS) with sands, on the new and hardened physiognomies of concrete. the property of RCS blended concrete was examined and likened with ordinary concrete of 40 MPa compression strength. the physiognomies of RCS concrete vary from ordinary concrete arranged with characteristic sand, as an outcome of the quality of connected mortar, old cement glue, and more fines. the outcomes demonstrate that the RCS concrete demonstrations tantamount workability in contrast with ordinary concrete. the mechanical physiognomies (compressive, flexure, split tensile and elastic modulus) of concrete developed with RCS was lower in compression to ordinary concrete however worthy up to 60percentage RCS in the blend. The drying shrinkage strain of 100percentage RCC mixed concrete at twenty-eight days was watched twice in compression to controlled concrete and it demonstrated more abrasion value in that comparison and furthermore concrete developed with 100 percent RCS indicated 41percentage and 11.3percentage lower in sorption value at ahead of schedule and later age organize individually in that examination.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 1029 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liang Chen ◽  
Peng Wu ◽  
Yanlong Chen ◽  
Wei Zhang

The effect of freeze-thaw on the physical-mechanical properties and fracture behavior of rock under combined compression and shear loading was crucial for revealing the instability mechanism and optimizing the structure design of rock engineering in cold regions. However, there were few reports on the failure behavior of rock treated by freeze-thaw under combined compression and shear loading due to the lack of test equipment. In this work, a novel combined compression and shear test (C-CAST) system was introduced to carry out a series of uniaxial compression tests on saturated yellow sandstone under various inclination angles (θ = 0°, 5°, 10°, and 15°) and the number of freeze-thaw cycles (N = 0, 20, 40, and 60). The test results showed that the P-wave velocity dramatically decreased, while the rock quality and porosity increased gradually as N increased; the peak compression strength and elastic modulus obviously decreased with the increasing θ and N, while the peak shear stress increased gradually with the increasing θ and decreased with the increase of N, indicating that the shear stress component can accelerate the crack propagation and reduce its resistance to deformation. The acoustic emission (AE) results revealed that the change of crack initiation (CI) stress and crack damage (CD) stress with the θ and N had a similar trend as that of the peak compression strength and elastic modulus. Particularly, the CI and CD thresholds at 60 cycles were only 81.31% and 84.47% of that at 0° cycle and indicated a serious freeze-thaw damage phenomenon, which was consistent with the results of scanning electron microscopy (SEM) with the appearance of some large-size damage cracks. The fracture mode of sandstone was dependent on the inclination angle. The failure mode developed from both the tensile mode (0°) and combined tensile-shear mode (5°) to a pure shear failure (10°–15°) with the increasing inclination angle. Meanwhile, the freeze-thaw cycle only had an obvious effect on the failure mode of the specimen at a 5° inclination. Finally, a novel multivariate regression analysis method was used to predict the peak compression strength and elastic modulus based on the initial strength parameters (θ = 0°, N = 0). The study results can provide an important reference for the engineering design of rock subjected to a complex stress environment in cold regions.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document