Behaviour of steel-fibre-reinforced normal-strength concrete slender columns under cyclic loading

 

Authors
Caballero Morrison, Karen E.; Bonet, José L.; Navarro Gregori, Juan
Format
Article
Status
publishedVersion
Description

The inclusion of ductility requirements is necessary to guarantee a safety design of concrete structures subjected to unexpected and/or reversal loads. It is important to outline that plastic hinges may develop in columns of reinforced concrete buildings, especially in column-foundation joints. The deformation capacity of the column depends on its slenderness. However, for the case of cyclic loading, few experimental tests of normal and fibre-reinforced concrete columns in the range of medium slenderness (between 5 and 10) have been performed. This paper presents an experimental research work on the behavior of slender columns subjected to combinations of constant axial and lateral cyclic loads. In order to study the behavior of this type of elements fourteen experimental tests are performed. The experimental results make it possible to calibrate numerical models, as well as, to validate simplified methods. The following variables are studied: slenderness, axial load level, volumetric transverse reinforcement ratio, and volumetric steel-fibre ratio. The maximum load and deformation capacity of the columns has been analyzed. It is interesting to note that ductility depends on the four tested variables analyzed. Moreover, the inclusion of steel-fibres into the concrete mixture increases the deformation capacity. In order to improve the steel fibres effectiveness the inclusion of a minimum transverse reinforcement is required. Thus, the column behavior suffers moderate strength losses due to cyclic loads. Finally, slenderness influences the deformation capacity if second-order effects are important, the cross-section has a ductile behavior, and materials capacity is reached
The inclusion of ductility requirements is necessary to guarantee a safety design of concrete structures subjected to unexpected and/or reversal loads. It is important to outline that plastic hinges may develop in columns of reinforced concrete buildings, especially in column-foundation joints. The deformation capacity of the column depends on its slenderness. However, for the case of cyclic loading, few experimental tests of normal and fibre-reinforced concrete columns in the range of medium slenderness (between 5 and 10) have been performed. This paper presents an experimental research work on the behavior of slender columns subjected to combinations of constant axial and lateral cyclic loads. In order to study the behavior of this type of elements fourteen experimental tests are performed. The experimental results make it possible to calibrate numerical models, as well as, to validate simplified methods. The following variables are studied: slenderness, axial load level, volumetric transverse reinforcement ratio, and volumetric steel-fibre ratio. The maximum load and deformation capacity of the columns has been analyzed. It is interesting to note that ductility depends on the four tested variables analyzed. Moreover, the inclusion of steel-fibres into the concrete mixture increases the deformation capacity. In order to improve the steel fibres effectiveness the inclusion of a minimum transverse reinforcement is required. Thus, the column behavior suffers moderate strength losses due to cyclic loads. Finally, slenderness influences the deformation capacity if second-order effects are important, the cross-section has a ductile behavior, and materials capacity is reached

Publication Year
2012
Language
eng
Topic
Slender column
confined concrete
reinforced concrete
steel fibre
ductility
energy dissipation
strength
axial load
cyclic load
Slender column
confined concrete
reinforced concrete
steel fibre
ductility
energy dissipation
strength
axial load
cyclic load
Repository
RI de Documento Digitales de Acceso Abierto de la UTP
Get full text
http://ridda2.utp.ac.pa/handle/123456789/2823
Rights
openAccess
License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/