Characteristics of bricks and mortar
Mortar properties
Mortars incorporating natural hydraulic lime (NHL) with a binder-to-aggregate ratio of 1:3 by volume were selected for the study, as these are typically used for conservation works on historic masonry [40]. An eminently hydraulic binder (NHL5), with a specific gravity of 2.70 and a specific weight of 26.5 kN/m3, conforming to BS EN 459–2, was used in the lime mortars [41, 42]. The hydraulic binder contains silicates, calcium aluminates, and calcium hydroxide, obtained by firing crushed marl limestone in kilns [42]. After removal from kilns it was subjected to slaking (hydration), which involves the addition of controlled amounts of water, and then ground to powder [29].
These are singular binders which combine hydraulic with air setting, obtained by carbonation with atmospheric CO2 [43]. The free lime Ca(OH)2 is above 15% for NHL5, whilst the sulphates content is below 2%. In addition to tap water, ‘soft sand’ typically used for bricklaying and pointing applications, manufactured to BS EN 13,139 [44], was added to all mortar mixes. This type of sand has rounded particles and is essential for enhanced mix workability in comparison to sharp sand [45]. The sieve analysis shown in Fig. 1, indicates that the particle size of the sand was below 1.0 mm. The specific gravity and bulk specific weight of the sand were 2.65 and around 15.7 kN/m3, respectively, whilst its water absorption was around 5%.
The mixing procedure from BS EN 1015–2 [46] and BS EN 459–2 [41] was followed to produce mortars from dry constituents and water [47]. The consistency of fresh mortar was assessed by means of a flow table according to BS EN 1015–3 [48]. The water was adjusted in order to obtain workable mortars with a flow in the range of 190 mm. The mortars were prepared in 20-L batches using a rotary mixer with a 40-L capacity. The dry constituents were mixed together for a period of 180 s, followed by the gradual addition of water, and were then further mixed for another 180 s. Besides the mortar used for bricklaying, another set of cubic (50 × 50 × 50 mm) samples and prismatic (25 × 25 × 150 mm) samples were used for strength assessments. After casting, the mortar samples were covered with a plastic sheet and removed from moulds after 5 days. These were then kept near the masonry specimens in laboratory conditions.
Compressive and flexural strengths were determined from compression and four-point tests according to BS EN 1015–11 [49]. These material tests were carried out at 41 ± 1 days from preparation, at the start of the experimental testing of all specimens. In addition to the mechanical properties in wet and ambient-dry conditions, the moisture content of both conditioning cases for NHL mortar samples was assessed. The ambient-dry samples and those submersed in tap water for a minimum of 48 h, were dried in an oven for 6 h at 60 °C and another for 18 h at 105 °C until the sample mass was relatively constant. The moisture content of the lime mortars was 2.54% by weight (wt.%) for ambient-dry samples and 10.80 (wt.%) for those submersed in water.
Brick units
Commercial fired-clay facing solid bricks were used for the construction of the walls and the extracted cores [50]. The nominal compressive strength assessed according to BS EN 771–1 [51] for elements tested perpendicular to bed face was 13 MPa, whilst the water absorption wa < 10%. To assess the mechanical properties of the materials from the brick units, compressive tests perpendicular or parallel to bed face as well as on cylindrical cores, were carried out as described in the following sections. As in the case of the lime mortar samples, the moisture content of bricks was assessed using the same conditioning procedure. The moisture content of ambient-dry bricks was 0.07% by weight (wt.%), and 10.46 wt.% for those submersed in water. The moisture content values for submersed samples show that the water absorption of the lime mortars and lime bricks were very similar.
From readily available materials, this type of fired-clay bricks has the closest physical and mechanical properties to those from the Mausoleum of Fatima Khatun (Umm al-Salih) built in the thirteenth century in Cairo, which is assessed in the project [39]. Site surveys indicated that: (i) ‘red’ bricks (used for the foundation) have a compressive strength (fb) of about 5.2 MPa and water absorption wa = 27.5%, (ii) ‘light brown’ bricks have an fb = 14.7 MPa and wa = 18.13% and (iii) ‘dark brown’ bricks have an fb = 22.7 MPa and wa = 13.4% [39]. The characteristics of available fired-clay bricks, chosen in this investigation, are hence in the low range of those from the site survey, and typically found in heritage masonry [52, 53], yet they can be used for comparative assessments and structural repair studies.
The measured brick sizes based on an average of 30 samples were 229 × 111 × 66 mm (± 2.0 × 2.9 × 0.8 mm). This variation in size is due to the slop moulding manufacturing procedure, which involves introducing a wet clay mixture into a mould without a bottom or top end, and which is then manually smoothened. The specific weight of the bricks is 17.1 kN/m3. The freeze/thaw resistance category of the fired-clay bricks from this study, as specified by the manufacturer, is F2 and corresponds to severe exposure conditions. The classification for the active water soluble salts content category is S0, indicating no requirements for salts content. The latter is related to the soluble salts naturally occurring in clays used for brick manufacturing.
Specimen details
This section presents the specimen configuration, conditioning and testing methods employed to assess the compressive strength of fired-clay brick units, brick cylinders and masonry elements (brick–mortar cores and small walls) under ambient-dry and wet conditions. The latter correspond to 48 h submersion of samples in water. Only ambient-dry and wet specimens have been considered for this study, as results from the literature [6, 8, 18] indicate that there is minimal or no influence of moisture on the mechanical properties of the materials, when the moisture content is below 3% by weight. Close inspection of the data obtained from submersing masonry specimens and independent masonry components (bricks, mortar samples and bricks with mortar joints) in water for a period of 24 h, indicates that after 3 h, the masonry specimens have a relatively constant weight. It is hence considered that for the geometries investigated in this paper, submersion of 48 h is sufficient to ensure fully saturated conditions at given ambient temperature and water pressure.
The test specimens prepared (Fig. 2) were divided equally into two groups: wet and dry. Half of the specimens were kept in laboratory conditions (T = 24–30 °C, RH = 30–50%), whilst the remaining specimens were in wet conditions. It is worth noting that the small samples (mortar, brick units, cylindrical brick and brick–mortar cores) were fully submersed in water, whilst the small walls were submersed over 3/5 of their depth for the above period to closely represent the site conditions considered. As the water level was maintained constant to compensate for the loss due to capillary absorption, the walls reached similar moisture content throughout their depth, as described below.
Brick units and cylindrical cores
To assess the actual material properties of brick units (described in Sect. 2.1.2), compressive tests were carried out on (i) 10 × brick units perpendicular to the bed face (Fig. 3a), (ii) 10 × brick units parallel to the bed face (Fig. 3b), (iii) 10 × cylindrical cores with an aspect ratio (height-to-diameter h/d) around 1.0 (Fig. 3c) and (iv) 10 × two-stacked cylindrical cores with an aspect ratio around 2.0 (Fig. 3d).
In addition to the brick-only samples described above, masonry specimens incorporating: (i) two cores with a mortar joint of about 15 mm in between (h/d > 2.0) (Fig. 3e), and (ii) two cores stacked with mortar layers at the top, bottom and between the brick cores (h/d > 2.0) (Fig. 3f), were extracted from the wall elements described in Sect. 2.2.2. These brick–mortar configurations were chosen to assess the influence of the mortar joint on the compressive strength of masonry elements, as well as to determine the material-dependent fracture initiation and propagation.
Brick units tested parallel to the bed face are labelled PRy, whilst those tested perpendicular to the bed face are labelled PPy (in which ‘y’ indicates the specimen conditioning: D for ambient-dry, W for wet). The cylindrical specimen references adopt the format Cxyz, in which x indicates the type of specimen (0 for single brick core samples, A for two stacked—brick-brick—samples, B for brick–mortar-brick samples and C for mortar-brick–mortar-brick–mortar samples), y indicates the specimen conditioning (D for ambient-dry, W for wet), and z the specimen sequence (a, b, c, etc.).
Considering the brick geometry mentioned before (229 × 111 × 66 mm), the brick units tested parallel to the bed face (PRy) had an aspect ratio h/d = 0.29, whilst those tested perpendicular to the bed face (PPy) had an aspect ratio of h/d = 0.48. Single brick core samples C0yz had a diameter of 69.4 ± 0.1 mm and an average h/d = 0.95. Brick-brick specimens CAyz made of two cored samples had a diameter of 69.4 ± 0.1 mm and an average h/d = 1.98. Specimens CByz had a diameter of 69.4 ± 0.1 mm at the brick elements and an average h/d = 2.20 due to the presence of a mortar layer, which was about 13.6 ± 1.7 mm thick and had a diameter of 68.4 ± 0.91 mm. The diameter of the last group CCyz was 69.1 ± 1.0 mm at the brick components, had an average h/d = 2.58, and incorporated mortar layers with an average thickness of 13.1 ± 2.5 mm and an average diameter of 68.5 ± 0.7 mm.
Tests on brick units in two orientations and cylinders with different slenderness, as described above, enable a better comparison of the fundamental mechanical properties and those obtained from standardised tests. It should be noted however that due to the triaxial confinement effects produced by the loading plates, as shown in Fig. 3h, leading to an enhancement in strength and ductility, brick unit tests perpendicular or parallel to the bed face would not reliably capture the uniaxial strength properties of the material. When steel plates are used to load specimens, triaxially-confined zones develop in the parts of the specimen below the plates [54]. This primarily occurs due to shear stresses between the loading platen and the specimen due to the incompatibility in lateral expansion and stiffness between the two [55]. As shown in Fig. 3b, the zones of triaxial confinement include most of the specimen length at small h/d ratios, whilst relatively large areas without restraint and uniaxial stress states develop as the specimen height increases. Hence, a higher strength is measured at low h/d, since the triaxial compressive strength is typically larger than the uniaxial compressive strength [54, 56]. Considering the above, the confinement effects are minimised or eliminated when h/d ≥ 2.0, and a uniaxial stress state exists at mid-height of the specimen. As for brick units tested perpendicular or parallel to bed face, specimens with h/d = 1.0 would develop higher strengths due to confinement effects produced by loading plates above and below the specimen.
In order to assess the flexural properties of the bricks, additional three-point bending tests on notched units were carried out. Prismatic samples with square cross-sections were obtained by cutting the brick elements in two using a diamond saw. The sample length was the same as a brick unit (≈229 mm), whilst its depth and width were both 51 ± 1.5 mm. A notch of 5 mm depth was then created using a grinder provided with a diamond disc. The faces that were in contact with the support/loading plates or bearings were ground in order to achieve planeness and parallelism as indicated in BS EN 771–1 [51].
Wall specimens
Tests on wall specimens of b × h × t = 472 × 403 × 110 mm (± 2.5 × 5.1 × 0.8 mm) were carried out to assess the compressive strength (fm) of masonry units as recommended by codified procedures (Figs. 2c and 3g). The specimen reference adopts the format Wxy, where x indicates ambient-dry (D) or wet (W) and y represents the specimen sequence (a, b, c, etc.). From the total of 12 wall specimens built, 9 were tested in compression and, as mentioned before, 3 untested walls were used to extract cylindrical cores. Six of the tested walls in compression were selected for direct comparison considering the influence of moisture on the response. These were WDa, WDb, WDc in dry conditions and WWa, WWb, WWc in wet conditions. The others included a pilot test or had eccentric failures (dry specimen WDd and wet specimen WWd) which are described briefly at the end of Sect. 3.3.
The walls were built on a flat horizontal surface following the procedures described in BS EN 1052–1 [57], respectively. The specimens had both horizontal and vertical lime mortar joints with an average thickness of 14.4 ± 1.4 mm. This was needed to adjust the uneven sizes of the bricks. The bricks were laid as received from the manufacturer without any conditioning or soaking in water prior to placing the mortar, which may have had an influence on the porosity of the fresh mortars. After the last course of bricks was laid, the specimens were kept in laboratory conditions. A plastic sheet was used to cover the specimens at early curing and the specimens were tested within a week at an age of 42–47 days. Three days before testing, the wall surfaces in contact with the loading plates were capped with a high-strength cement slurry with a ratio 1:1, and relatively heavy steel plates of 6.5 kg were placed above the fresh cement slurry to ensure planeness of the loading surface.
Due to the relatively low height of the specimens (403 ± 5.1 mm), immersion to 3/5 of depth corresponding to 3 courses of bricks, enabled full capillary absorption of water. Visual inspection indicated that the top bricks that were not immersed in water were saturated. To obtain the moisture distribution across the specimen, a supplementary wall was built and subjected to the same conditioning and curing procedure. Prior to the immersion of 3/5 of wall depth in water (courses i-iii in Fig. 2c), each brick was marked. After 48 h, the wall was dismantled, and each brick and mortar joints were weighed. To obtain the moisture content, all components were dried in an oven for 6 h at 60 °C and for at least 18 h at 105 °C until the sample mass was largely constant. The moisture distribution results indicated that the same moisture content of 10.7% ± 0.2 wt was consistently obtained in all five brick courses (i–v), irrespective of whether they were submersed in water or not, due to capillary absorption. The moisture content was therefore shown to be evenly distributed across the specimen.
Testing arrangements and instrumentation
The specimens were tested in a four-post Instron 3500 kN machine and the testing arrangement included top and bottom high strength steel transfer plates, with the actuator at the top. As illustrated in Fig. 2a–c, two displacement transducers were employed around the specimens to record the axial displacement between the machine base and the top transfer plate. These were used as a secondary measurement system, along with displacement recordings provided by the machine and the data from the digital image correlation (DIC) system, as described below.
DIC is a non-contact system which offers a high level of accuracy and practicality compared to conventional mechanical instrumentation at ambient and elevated temperature [58,59,60]. It consists of two light-weight CMOS cameras with USB 3.0 interface for distances up to 25 m. The high sensitivity cameras have a resolution of 2.3 Megapixel at 100 Hz frame rate. These are connected to a controller which also acts as a data acquisition system. As part of the preparation process, the specimens were firstly painted in white, and then carefully speckled with 0.5–2.0 mm black dots to create a high-contrast black-white pattern. The size of the black dots depended on the size of the specimen and distance between the cameras and speckled surface.
Prior to testing, a calibration procedure was undertaken by adjusting iteratively the aperture, ambient lighting and camera focus, while taking photos of a calibration plate adjacent to the specimen face. This was required to allow the post-processing software to compute the distance between the cameras and the specimen, and ultimately to compute the surface strain vector fields. A frequency of 0.2 Hz for recording data was chosen to acquire a sufficiently large pool of data to minimise possible scatter [61]. After testing, the DIC data were further processed to obtain deformation vector fields. From these, surface strains or deformations were obtained from assigned virtual gauges with various lengths depending on the specimen size and brick layout.
As mentioned in Sects. 2.1 and 2.2, standardised compressive tests on brick units and flexural tests on notched half-bricks were carried out and strains or crack opening were obtained from DIC data. For the compressive brick tests shown in Fig. 2a, vertical 50 mm gauges and horizontal 25 mm gauges were assigned to assess the axial and the lateral strain, respectively. For the cylindrical cores (Fig. 2b), a vertical gauge of 70 mm and horizontal gauges of 15 mm at mid-height of the specimen were used to determine axial and lateral strains, respectively. To obtain the axial strain of the small walls (Fig. 2c), two vertical gauges of 170 mm were used, whilst to determine the lateral strains, a horizontal gauge of 240 mm was used to assess lateral strains [57].