Damage behavior of concrete members subjected to underwater contact explosion

•ABAQUS CDP model could well simulate the damage pattern of concrete slab subjected to underwater contact explosion.•Underwater contact explosion caused more serious damage compared to the air contact explosion.•For gravity dam, lowering water level reduced damages to the dam body (craters, punching...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEngineering failure analysis Vol. 151; p. 107412
Main Authors Wang, Ying, Liao, Tianyu, Chi, Hui, Lai, Zhichao, Qin, Jian, Huang, Ruiyuan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.09.2023
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Summary:•ABAQUS CDP model could well simulate the damage pattern of concrete slab subjected to underwater contact explosion.•Underwater contact explosion caused more serious damage compared to the air contact explosion.•For gravity dam, lowering water level reduced damages to the dam body (craters, punching damage, and stress concentration).•For arch dam, lowering water level reduced most damage except the arch end damage. In order to investigate the damage mechanism of dams subjected to underwater contact explosion, firstly, an experimental program was conducted with six concrete slabs and two explosive quantities. The test results showed that the diameter and depth of the crater on the front and back surface of the concrete slab increased with increasing explosive quantity with radial and circular cracks generated. Three different concrete material models were tested and it was found the CDP model was most suitable in simulating concrete subjected to underwater explosion. The calibrated models were used to conduct parametric studies to study the effect of explosive quantity, slab thickness, and transferring medium (water or air). Numerical analysis results showed that the diameter and depth of the crater on both the front and back surface of the concrete slab decreased with increasing slab thickness and decreasing explosive quantity. In addition, the damage caused by the air contact explosion was smaller and more concentrated in the detonation center compared with underwater contact explosion. Finally, a gravity dam and an arch dam were modeled to study the effect of detonation depth and water level on the damage distribution pattern of the dams. Based on the results, recommendations were provided for the anti-explosion protection design of hydraulic structures.
ISSN:1350-6307
1873-1961
DOI:10.1016/j.engfailanal.2023.107412