Anciaux, GuillaumePundir, MohitAnciaux, Guillaume2023-02-282023-02-282023-02-282022-06-08https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/195340In concrete structures, opened cracks contribute significantly to the transfer of shear and normal stresses through the contact forces acting on fractured surfaces. Such contact forces are due to protruding asperities, engaged by interlocking and friction during mixed-mode displacements. The presented work first presents micro-CT and digital microscope measures of concrete surfaces which were previously sheared until failure. This allows to link the features of cracked concrete surfaces with the distribution of aggregates - induced by the cumulative density function and the radial distribution function - and with a small scale roughness coming from much smaller grains (mortar and broken aggregates) which can be acknowledged with statistical indicators such as the Hurst exponent and the root-mean-square of surface slopes. This experimental data lead to an accurate numerical surface generator which superposes of a fractal-like roughness with a set of protruding aggregates. Then, the role played by such a roughness on shear resistance is investigated numerically, thanks to a contact solver based on a boundary integral approach. With an extremely fine description of cracked surfaces (four million discretization points), we demonstrate that roughness impacts drastically the shear resistance. The small scale roughness induces a non-monotonic evolution of the true contact area, which first increases before decaying as a power-law, which is intimately linked with the fine scale roughness self-affinity. A remarkable outcome of our approach is a better agreement with the seminal experimental results of Jacobsen. We finally propose a semi-empirical traction-separation law for cracked concrete, which accounts for micro-scale roughness and aggregate distribution. This law is directly usable in finite element simulations employing a cohesive element modeling of cracks, and naturally includes roughness-induced interlocking effect.Surface roughness and shear resistance in cracked concretetext::conference output::conference presentation