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ICE ABRASION ON MARINE CONCRETE STRUCTURES

Møen, Egil
Doctoral thesis
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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2374733
Date
2015
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  • Institutt for konstruksjonsteknikk [2629]
Abstract
A significant amount of the world’s undiscovered oil- and gas resources are located North of

the Arctic Circle. In the light of this, there is currently an increasing interest in developing

necessary infrastructure to support sustainable development of these resources. Also increased

availability to the Arctic due to reduced amounts of ice for longer periods of the year will ease

the access for ship transport and increase the seasonal window for construction activities in

these areas. Towards the end of the last millennium, the exploration of oil and gas in the

North Sea was the main driving force behind development in concrete technology for use in

large offshore concrete structures. Knowledge and expertise derived from this period has

benefited in other sectors of the concrete industry as well, such as costal bridges and quay

structures where durability is important. Going forward, the ability of concrete structures to

withstand exposure from sea ice and low temperatures is decisive and calls for increased

knowledge and new technology.

Ice abrasion is a severe degradation mechanism responsible for reduced service life in marine

concrete structures exposed to sea ice. The phenomenon is caused by ice-concrete friction

forces and results in gradual loss of concrete cover. In extreme cases, ice abrasion has brought

about complete deterioration of the reinforcement cover of marine concrete structures, which

represents a potential threat regarding the safety against load-carrying failure. Current

regulations with regard to material selection and design of concrete structures exposed to ice

abrasion are defined in ISO 19903:2006 and ISO 19906:2010, where most of the regulations

are given as functional descriptions. The interpretation of the regulations is therefore mainly

based on considerations without sufficient documentation, which calls for reliable and

research-based estimation methods.

As a first approach, an investigation was performed in order to develop equations for rough

estimation of expected abrasion rates based on the experimental results in the current study.

The equations were derived on the basis of a regression analyses where the measured ice

abrasion rates from the experiments were taken as the response parameter and the three

explanatory variables in the experiments; compressive strength, ice pressure and ice

temperature, as predictors. Based on simplified assumptions, a direct application of the

equations provided fairly good approximations of maximum abrasion depths when

benchmarked against a marine concrete structure with known abrasion depths. The best prediction was achieved for the parts of the structure with orientation parallel to the

dominating ice drift directions. For the faces with lower ice exposure, the equations underpredicted

the associated abrasion depths significantly. The ice-concrete coefficient of friction

is reported to increase with decreasing drift speed and cause higher abrasion rates. As our

equations did not include the speed of ice as predictor, they were not able to account for this

effect.

The distribution of ice abrasion on structures is highly dependent on the direction of the ice

drift. In previous field studies dealing with concrete abrasion due to ice drift, reliable

information about site specific ice conditions is sparse. On this basis, results from in-situ

measurements of three severely damaged concrete lighthouses due to long term sea ice

exposure are presented and discussed. As one of the inspected lighthouses showed particular

severe damage, this structure formed the main basis of the investigation. The focus was on

local ice conditions with main emphasise on the amount of ice drift per direction and its

influence on distribution of abrasion depths along the perimeter of the lighthouse. The

investigation revealed that the largest abrasion depths were observed on the faces oriented

parallel with the dominating ice drift direction(s). Further, the rate of abrasion increased

significantly with decreasing annual ice drift. This trend was most pronounced for the faces

with the lowest ice exposure. The investigation revealed that abrasion depths on faces

oriented diametrically opposite to each other increased linearly with the amount of ice drift

along these faces.

In previous experimental- and field investigations, ice abrasion rates were traditionally

reported as average values, often without quantification of the uncertainty in the results. In

order to allow a probabilistic approach in the results analysis, an appropriate probability

distribution function to represent abrasion rates is needed. Based on our experimental results

we performed goodness of fit tests and found that the abrasion rates were well represented by

a 3-parameter Weibull distribution. The distribution was statistically significant based on a

confidence level of 95%.

An ice abrasion test rig was developed where a vertical oriented fresh-water ice cylinder was

sliding in a repetitive back and forth motion on the surface of the concrete specimens. Ice

pressure and concrete compressive strength were the most important parameters governing ice

abrasion rates. Abrasion rates increased with increasing ice pressure. For some experiments the abrasion rates showed a quadratic increase with the ice pressure. As a result, it is

important to seek to reduce the ice loads for concrete structures exposed to abrasion. This can

be achieved by giving the structure a sloped cross section in the ice exposed zone, which

causes the ice to fail in bending which is associated with lower loads as compared to failure in

crushing. The results were ambiguous with regard to the effect of ice temperature on abrasion

and no clear conclusion was reached based on the conducted experiments. We suspect that

this was related to a specific feature of the experimental set-up and recommend that further

studies investigate this closer.

Ice abrasion on concrete is a complex process which may be investigated on several scales,

pending on the aim of the research. In order to seek a fundamental understanding of the

governing tribology processes involved, it would also be of interest to study concrete ice

abrasion at nano scale.
Publisher
NTNU
Series
Doctoral thesis at NTNU;2015:189

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