JoVE Logo

Sign In

Fatigue, in the context of materials science and engineering, refers to the weakening or failure of a material caused by repeatedly applied loads, even if these loads are below the strength limit of the material. Fatigue strength in concrete is a critical property that influences its durability and longevity. Concrete can fail in two ways due to fatigue. Static fatigue or creep rupture occurs under a constant load or one that increases slowly. The other failure mode is due to cyclical or repeated loads, known as fatigue.

Interestingly, the compressive strength of concrete, typically measured in a short span of a few minutes, varies with the rate at which the load is applied and the duration of the test—for instance, a slower loading rate or a longer test duration results in lower measured strength. At the same time, rapid application of load enhances the strength but reduces the strain capacity of the material. Static fatigue arises at low loading rates when stress exceeds about 70 to 80 percent of the short-term strength, initiating rapid microcrack formation and leading to failure. As concrete ages, its strength and fatigue strength increase in tandem, indicating that fatigue failure occurs at a consistent percentage of its maximum strength, regardless of the number of cycles.

From Chapter 7:

article

Now Playing

7.11 : Fatigue Strength of Concrete

Strength of Concrete

58 Views

article

7.1 : Tensile Strength Considerations of Concrete

Strength of Concrete

33 Views

article

7.2 : Behavior of Concrete Under Compressive Load

Strength of Concrete

47 Views

article

7.3 : Porosity in Cement Paste

Strength of Concrete

37 Views

article

7.4 : Total Voids in Concrete

Strength of Concrete

28 Views

article

7.5 : Pore Size Distribution

Strength of Concrete

27 Views

article

7.6 : Microcracking in Concrete

Strength of Concrete

35 Views

article

7.7 : Water Cement Ratio

Strength of Concrete

24 Views

article

7.8 : Aggregate Cement Ratio

Strength of Concrete

102 Views

article

7.9 : Transition Zone

Strength of Concrete

26 Views

article

7.10 : Relation Between Tensile Strength and Compressive Strength of Concrete

Strength of Concrete

37 Views

article

7.12 : Impact Strength of Concrete

Strength of Concrete

77 Views

article

7.13 : Abrasion Resistance of Concrete

Strength of Concrete

27 Views

article

7.14 : Reinforcements in Concrete

Strength of Concrete

23 Views

article

7.15 : Fiber Reinforced Concrete

Strength of Concrete

24 Views

See More

JoVE Logo

Privacy

Terms of Use

Policies

Research

Education

ABOUT JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved