The term fragment compressive stress describes compressive stresses that arise locally in and between fragments in brittle materials such as concrete, natural stone, or masonry. These locally concentrated contact stresses shape fracture patterns, spalling, and the size of fragments. In concrete demolition, rock excavation, and tunnel construction, fragment compressive stress decisively influences how structural members or rock bodies separate under mechanical action. In practice, fragment compressive stress is generated and controlled by the interplay of tool geometry, force path, and boundary conditions—for example when crushing with concrete pulverizers or when controlled splitting with hydraulic wedge splitters (see hydraulic rock and concrete splitters).
Definition: What is meant by fragment compressive stress
Fragment compressive stress refers to locally acting compressive stresses that occur at the contact surfaces of fragments (shards) as well as in immediately adjacent zones of a brittle material. They arise when loads, wedge forces, or jaw forces press fracture surfaces against each other. Fragment compressive stress leads to crushing, microcrack formation, and secondary fragmentation (spalling, chips), influences crack paths, and determines whether a component fractures into a few large or many small fragments. It interacts closely with splitting tensile stresses, shear loading, and friction at contact surfaces.
Mechanical fundamentals and operating principles
The mechanics of fragment compressive stress are governed by contact pressure, frictional interlock, and the brittle-fracture characteristics of concrete and rock. Decisive factors are the compressive strength of the matrix, the aggregate–matrix bond, and confinement.
Contact pressure and wedge action
Local contact stresses arise at edges, notches, borehole walls, and tool bearing surfaces. Wedge forces—such as those generated by spreading wedges of hydraulic wedge splitters—produce high radial pressures in the borehole that initiate cracks. Fragment compressive stresses build up between the forming fragments, favoring spalling at free edges or deflecting crack paths.
Fracture patterns and crushing zones
Fragment compressive stress produces typical fracture patterns: crushing zones under pressure points, edge spalling, spall cones, and comminution zones with a fine particle fraction. With concrete pulverizers (see use of concrete crushers), a compression and crushing zone forms in the area of the jaws; cracks propagate toward regions of lower restraint, while friction and fragment compressive stress between fragments govern the energy input into comminution.
Role of reinforcement
Reinforcing steel influences fragment compressive stress by limiting crack opening and holding fragments together. This increases local contact stresses between fragments; at the same time, bars alter crack paths and can lead to additional spalling at anchorage points.
Importance in concrete demolition, rock excavation, and tunnel construction
In the deconstruction of concrete members and in rock, minimizing uncontrolled spalling is paramount. Excessive fragment compressive stress leads to flying chips, increased fines, and unfavorable fracture paths. A targeted adjustment of the force path—e.g., via jaw positioning, jaw geometry, or wedge orientation—helps guide cracks more predictably and protect edge regions.
Controlling the fracture path
With concrete pulverizers, the fracture path can be influenced through gradual force build-up, suitable points of attack, and supported bearing. Hydraulic wedge splitters use radial spreading pressure from boreholes; drill pattern, spacing, depth, and wedge orientation determine how much fragment compressive stress develops at free edges and how large the resulting fragments are.
Influencing factors on fragment compressive stress and fragment formation
The manifestation of fragment compressive stress results from material, geometry, and process parameters.
- Material: compressive strength, splitting tensile strength, modulus of elasticity, aggregate structure, porosity, moisture, and aging.
- Geometry: member thickness, edge distances, notches, borehole diameter, degree of reinforcement.
- Loading: point of attack, contact area, pressing rate, peak forces, confinement.
- Environment: temperature, moisture gradients, freeze–thaw effects, thermal stresses.
- Tool: jaw geometry and tooth profile of concrete pulverizers, wedge angle and expansion stroke of hydraulic wedge splitters, stability of the hydraulic power pack.
Practice: Using and limiting fragment compressive stress in a targeted manner
The goal is to build up fragment compressive stress where it initiates the crack deliberately, and to limit it where spalling is undesirable.
Using concrete pulverizers
- Select points of attack: Start away from delicate edges to reduce edge spalling.
- Control the force path: Apply pressure progressively; short hold phases favor orderly crack formation instead of brittle shattering.
- Leverage jaw geometry: Wider contact areas reduce local contact pressures; profiled teeth increase the notch effect in a targeted way.
- Consider reinforcement: Plan the cutting or separation sequence so that restraining effects of bars do not cause uncontrolled fragment compressive stresses.
Using hydraulic wedge splitters
- Optimize the drill pattern: Choose borehole spacing and depth so that cracks converge; this reduces fragment compressive stress at free edges.
- Observe wedge orientation: Align wedge direction away from sensitive areas; this reduces spalling on exposed surfaces.
- Use confinement: In massive cross-sections, higher spreading pressure can be applied without provoking excessive chip formation.
- Force steps and pacing: A staged spreading process promotes crack advance with less fine fragmentation.
Measurement, estimation, and documentation
Fragment compressive stress can rarely be measured directly; it is estimated from fracture patterns, fragment sizes, and test values.
- Laboratory values: uniaxial compressive strength, splitting tensile test, and point load index provide indications of comminution tendency and contact sensitivity.
- Site observation: size and shape of fragments, extent of edge spalling, dust and fines content.
- Indirect methods: rebound hammers for homogeneity checks, acoustic event recording to assess crack growth.
- Documentation: photographs of fracture surfaces, drill patterns, and tool positions facilitate optimization of subsequent work steps.
Application in building gutting and cutting
During gutting works in existing buildings, fragment compressive stress must remain low in adjacent components to avoid collateral damage. A combination of pre-targeted weakenings (e.g., saw cuts to guide the notch), moderate jaw pressure, and supported bearing of components reduces contact pressures between fragments in sensitive edge zones. Hydraulic power packs with finely controllable regulation support controlled, low-shock force application (see hydraulic power units).
Natural stone extraction and special applications
In natural stone extraction, handling fragment compressive stress determines block quality and yield. A favorable drill pattern with suitable wedge orientation promotes smooth split surfaces and avoids excessive edge spalling. In special applications—such as vibration-sensitive areas—controlled, low-frequency processes with moderate contact stresses are preferable to limit flying debris.
Typical failure patterns and remedies
- Excessive edge spalling: Choose points of attack farther from free edges; enlarge contact areas; adjust wedge orientation.
- Fine fragmentation instead of split fracture: Force ramp too steep; switch to stepped loading and longer hold phases.
- Crack deflection due to reinforcement: Change jaw sequence; expose or cut bars early to avoid uncontrolled fragment compressive stress.
- Flying debris: Use shielding, increase working distances, and reduce pressing speed.
Terminology and distinction
Fragment compressive stress must be distinguished from shear stresses (shear loading) and from pure crushing without fragment formation. In practice, these phenomena occur in combination: local contact pressure generates microcracks that lead to splitting tensile fractures; compressive stresses then build up between the emerging fragments, governing further crack advance and spalling at edges.
Safety, emissions, and gentle working practices
Fragment compressive stress can promote flying debris and dust generation. Appropriate safety equipment, shielding, and dust suppression measures are required. Noise emissions can be reduced through controlled force build-up, suitable tool geometry, and adapted hydraulic pacing. Notes on legal requirements are always to be understood as general; specific protective measures must be adapted to the respective construction site situation.




















