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Substandard reinforced concrete members subjected to compression: FRP confining effects
Abstract The investigation focuses on the effectiveness of fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP) confinement in upgrading ductility and strength of reinforced concrete members under axial monotonic compression. An experimental program is presented that extends available database to address the behavior of old type members with square section, having extremely low concrete strength and potential longitudinal bars’ premature buckling. Reinforced concrete specimens were strengthened by carbon or glass FRP wraps while plain FRP confined concrete specimens were also constructed and tested to evaluate comparatively the confining effects of steel stirrups, FRP wraps, or of dual confinement. The achieved strength, ductility and energy absorption levels of the specimens were quantified to assess the effect of the longitudinal bars. Finally, a handy design-oriented empirical strength model is proposed. According to the proposed approach, no estimation of effective stress or strain at failure of FRP jacket is necessary. The satisfactory accuracy of the predictions of the proposed model is demonstrated through comparison against existing models and over a large database of results on uniform confinement as well as over presented specimens.
Substandard reinforced concrete members subjected to compression: FRP confining effects
Abstract The investigation focuses on the effectiveness of fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP) confinement in upgrading ductility and strength of reinforced concrete members under axial monotonic compression. An experimental program is presented that extends available database to address the behavior of old type members with square section, having extremely low concrete strength and potential longitudinal bars’ premature buckling. Reinforced concrete specimens were strengthened by carbon or glass FRP wraps while plain FRP confined concrete specimens were also constructed and tested to evaluate comparatively the confining effects of steel stirrups, FRP wraps, or of dual confinement. The achieved strength, ductility and energy absorption levels of the specimens were quantified to assess the effect of the longitudinal bars. Finally, a handy design-oriented empirical strength model is proposed. According to the proposed approach, no estimation of effective stress or strain at failure of FRP jacket is necessary. The satisfactory accuracy of the predictions of the proposed model is demonstrated through comparison against existing models and over a large database of results on uniform confinement as well as over presented specimens.
Substandard reinforced concrete members subjected to compression: FRP confining effects
Rousakis, Theodoros C. (author) / Karabinis, Athanasios I. (author)
Materials and Structures ; 41 ; 1595-1611
2008-01-15
17 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Substandard reinforced concrete members subjected to compression: FRP confining effects
British Library Online Contents | 2008
|Substandard reinforced concrete members subjected to compression: FRP confining effects
Online Contents | 2008
|Substandard reinforced concrete members subjected to compression: FRP confining effects
Online Contents | 2008
|