Effect of axial compression on flexural strength of freshwater ice

In the design of bridges, wind turbine towers, offshore structures and ice-class ships for operations in ice-prone regions, sloped structures may be employed to promote flexural failure of level ice to reduce loads on the structure. During such interactions, the ice sheet does not fail in pure bendi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Volume 6: Polar and Arctic Sciences and Technology
Main Authors: Anwar, Taha, Taylor, Rocky, Wang, Jungyong
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: American Society of Mechanical Engineers 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1115/OMAE2023-104638
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Summary:In the design of bridges, wind turbine towers, offshore structures and ice-class ships for operations in ice-prone regions, sloped structures may be employed to promote flexural failure of level ice to reduce loads on the structure. During such interactions, the ice sheet does not fail in pure bending since a component of the applied force at the sloped interface results in an axial load that induces a compressive stress in the ice. The net effect of this axial component is that the corresponding compressive stresses balance with flexure-induced tensile stresses in the outmost fibres of the ice. As a result, the apparent flexural strength of the ice is expected to increase with increasing axial compression, since larger bending forces would be required to generate sufficient tension to trigger fracture. In ice load prediction models for sloped structures, an in-plane compression (IPC) factor is applied to calculated loads to account for increased flexural strength which is empirically determined to be 1.5. While the method of superposition may be used to assess combined loading effects for elastic structures, assessing such effects in ice is more complex since the behaviour of ice is not purely elastic. In this paper, the relationship between axial compression and the flexural strength of freshwater ice is studied experimentally to assess how the flexural failure behaviour of the ice changes for different levels of in-plane compression factor. A series of experiments on freshwater ice have been conducted for compression levels at 75%, 135% and 185% of unconfined flexural strength for ram speeds of 0.1 mm/s, 1.0 mm/s and 10.0 mm/s. These results indicate that in-plane compression significantly increases the apparent flexural strength of the ice, highlighting the need for further work in this area to better understand this phenomenon and assess implications for design. This new testing approach provides a promising direction for further examination of these important effects, including extending this work to the ...