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A study of crack-tip deformation and crack growth in asphalt concrete using fracture mechanics

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TLDR
In this paper, a comprehensive experimental/analytical study of crack growth in asphalt concrete using fracture mechanics is presented, which provides critical information that is complementary to the viscoelastoplastic continuum damage model in modeling crack growth using finite element analysis.
Abstract
This paper presents findings from a comprehensive experimental/analytical study of crack growth in asphalt concrete using fracture mechanics. The primary objective of this study is to provide critical information that is complementary to the viscoelastoplastic continuum damage model in modeling crack growth using finite element analysis. To simulate mode I fracture, uniaxial monotonic and cyclic tension tests were conducted on prismatic specimens with symmetric double notches. Digital Image Correlation (DIC), a noncontact, full-field displacement/strain measurement technique, was utilized to investigate the size and shape of the fracture process zone (FPZ). Irrespective of the notch size and testing conditions, the FPZ was observed to be similar in size and shape for the mixture. Also, it was found that the strain at the crack tip immediately before crack initiation is a decreasing function of strain rate. The experimental data were analyzed using several fracture mechanics theories, including the cohesive crack model and crack growth rate laws based on the stress intensity factor, K1. The cohesive crack model analysis provides the fracture energy and softening function that describe the post-peak behavior with strain localization. The analysis based on K1 shows that the specimen size has no significant effect on the crack growth rate laws. The effect of temperature is pronounced in the crack growth rate law using temperature-reduced crack speed based on K1. The time-temperature superposition principle, with the shift factor from the linear viscoelastic range, was applied to these crack growth rate laws and successfully collapsed the curves at different temperatures into a single relationship.

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Citations
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Development and Verification of the Overlay Tester Based Fatigue Cracking Prediction Approach

TL;DR: In this article, an overlay tester (OT) based fatigue cracking prediction approach is proposed, in which the OT is used to determine fracture properties (A and n) of hot-mix asphalt (HMA) mixtures.
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Digital image correlation techniques to investigate strain fields and cracking phenomena in asphalt materials

TL;DR: In this article, a specific task group of the RILEM Technical Committee 241-MCD “Mechanisms of Cracking and Debonding in Asphalt and Composite Pavements” was established to investigate DIC applications for non-destructive and noncontact measurements of strain fields during laboratory testing.
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An optical strain measurement system for asphalt mixtures

TL;DR: In this article, a digital image correlation (DIC) system for non-contact and full strain field measurements is presented for the purpose of investigating the cracking behavior of hot mix asphalt (HMA) mixtures.
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Using Acoustic Emission to monitor fatigue damage and healing in Asphalt Concrete

TL;DR: In this article, an Acoustic Emission (AE) characterization of damage accumulation and strength recovery in Asphalt Concrete (AC) mixture is presented, where a series of uniaxial tensile cyclic tests with and without rest period has been conducted on a 19 mm nominal maximum size of aggregate (NMSA) AC at 20°C.
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Viscoelastoplastic Damage Characterization of Asphalt—Aggregate Mixtures Using Digital Image Correlation

TL;DR: In this article, the VEPCD model is used for the behavioral prediction of asphalt-aggregate mixtures subjected to tensile stresses in pavement structures. But, the model cannot accurately predict the performance of asphalt aggregates after the strain localization.
References
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Book

Fatigue of materials

TL;DR: In this article, the cyclic deformation and fatigue crack initiation in polycrystalline ductile solids was studied and a total-life approach was proposed to deal with the problem.
Journal Article

Analysis of crack propagation in asphalt concrete using a cohesive crack model

TL;DR: In this paper, a cohesive crack model was proposed to simulate the progressive crack development in asphalt concrete, which is similar to the Dugdale-Barenblatt model, and the effects of temperature on Young's modulus, fracture energy, and indirect tensile strength were evaluated.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of the shape of the strain-softening diagram on the bearing capacity of concrete beams

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of the shape of the strain-softening diagram on the bearing capacity of three-point loaded beams, as calculated by the fictitious crack model, is analyzed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fracture Process Zone Presence and Behavior in Mortar Specimens

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present experimental evidence of the process zone occuring as a cloud of unconnected microcracks around and ahead of a Mode I macrocrack, showing that as the loading increases, a long and narrow process zone develops ahead of the main crack tip.
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