Viscoelasticity and crack growth govern the long-term deformability of concrete and thus its service behaviour and its durability. For low load levels, viscoelasticity behaves quasilinearly and crack growth is inactive. On the other hand, for high load levels, cracks grow and interact with viscoelasticity. Numerous authors have long demonstrated the influence of microcracking on creep qualitatively. Moreover, rate effects on the fracture behaviour of concrete are clear for low and high loading rates. Nevertheless, the mechanisms involved in these effects are not yet clearly determined. Cohesive crack approaches extended to time dependent parameters, give some elements of explanation, although without providing a general tool capable of explaining all the phenomena. The dissipative nature of crack growth and viscoelasticity naturally encourages one to model their couplings by means of an energybased approach to fracture. This is the meaning of the continuum thermodynamics of dissipative multicracked granular bodies developed by Huet (1997). This theoretical formalism puts the emphasis on the effect of viscoelasticity on the driving (reactive) part of the propagation criteria (energy release rate). The aim of this experimental research was to investigate coupling effects between viscoelasticity and crack growth in concrete. With this aim in view, 4 different types of fracture test have been performed on the same material (concrete with a maximum aggregate size of 8 mm), with a constant specimen geometry (rectangular wedge splitting specimens 20 by 20 by 10 cm). The first type of test consisted of performing a series of successive relaxations, at various increasing load levels, before, on and after the peak force, following the envelope of failure. Special attention was devoted to the influence of the control parameter ("active": with respect to displacements measured on the specimen, or "passive": crosshead displacement) and loading history. The results showed a progressive deviation from the linear viscoelastic behaviour starting from a load level of approximately 50 % of the peak force, before the peak. This deviation was significantly higher with crosshead control ("passive"). It depended on the loading history. After the peak, in "active" displacement control, relative relaxations tended to be similar whatever the load level. The displacement parameters (other than control) measured on the specimen or crosshead during relaxation, showed an evolution dependent on the control parameter. This effect was significant at the beginning of the relaxation and tended to disappear later. Furthermore, acoustic emissions could be detected at the beginning and during some relaxations, for high load levels (nearby peak force and after). The second type of test consisted of one or more successive creep levels up to eventual failure under sustained force. In certain cases, during creep levels leading to fracture, alternating secondary and tertiary creep with mu
Thomas Keller, Landolf-Giosef-Anastasios Rhode-Barbarigos, Tara Habibi