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1.
Materials (Basel) ; 16(7)2023 Mar 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37049017

RESUMEN

Beam-column connections (joints) are one of the most critical elements which govern the overall seismic behavior of reinforced concrete (RC) structures. Especially in buildings designed according to previous generation codes, joints are often encountered with insufficient transverse reinforcement detailing, or even with no stirrups, leading to brittle failure. Therefore, externally bonded composite materials may be applied, due to the ease of application, low specific weight and corrosion-free properties. The present work assesses the seismic performance of insufficiently reinforced large-scale T beam-column connections with large and heavily reinforced beams. The joints receive externally bonded NSM X-shaped composite ropes with improved versatile continuous detailing. The columns are subjected to low normalized axial load, while the free end of the beam is subjected to transverse displacement reversals. Different failure criteria are investigated, based on the beam free-end transverse load, as well as on the joint region shear deformations, to critically assess the structural performance of the subsystem. The experimental investigation concludes that cyclic loading has a detrimental effect on the performance of the joint. Absence of an internal steel stirrup leads to earlier deterioration of the joint. The unstrengthened specimens disintegrate at 2% drift, which corresponds to 34 mm beam-end displacement, and shear deformation of the joint equal to 30 × 10-4 rad. The composite strengthening, increases the structural performance of the joint up to 4% drift which corresponds to 68 mm of beam-end displacement and shear deformation of the joint equal to 10 × 10-4 rad. The investigated cases of inadequate existing transverse reinforcement in the joint and light external FRP strengthening provide a unique insight into the required retrofits to achieve different levels of post-yielding displacement ductility under seismic loading at 2%, 3% and 4% drift. It allows for future analytical refinements toward reliable redesign analytical models.

2.
Polymers (Basel) ; 12(11)2020 Nov 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33203144

RESUMEN

This paper investigates the crucial design parameters for the prediction of the ultimate axial compressive deformation of reinforced concrete columns externally confined with fiber reinforced polymer (FRP) materials. Numerous test results of available columns with a square and rectangular section under cyclic axial loading were gathered in an advanced database. Herein, the database is enriched with necessary design parameters in order to address the unique tensile strain field variation of the FRP jacket. Since there is a lack of consequent recording of the FRP strain field in existing experiments, three dimensional pseudodynamic finite element analyses results from several characteristic cases of tested columns are utilized to address this gap. Therefore, a hybrid experimental-analytical database is formed, including several critical FRP strains, steel strains and deformations. A modified model is proposed to predict the ultimate axial strain for reinforced concrete columns externally confined with FRP materials. The proposed model aims to address indirectly the effects of the internal steel cage, concrete section shape and of their interaction with the external FRP jacket on the critical tensile strain of the FRP jacket at failure of the column. The predictive performance of the model over the available tests of (reinforced concrete) RC columns under cyclic compression is remarkably improved when compared against the performance of other existing models. It provides predictions with average ratio (AR) of 0.96 and average absolute error (AAE) of 36.5% and therefore may contribute to safer seismic resistant redesign.

3.
Polymers (Basel) ; 12(11)2020 Oct 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33143257

RESUMEN

This paper utilizes the advanced potential of pseudodynamic three-dimensional finite-element modeling to study the axial mechanical behavior of square and rectangular reinforced concrete columns, confined with fiber reinforced polymer (FRP) jackets and continuous composite ropes in seismic applications. The rigorous and versatile Riedel-Hiermaier-Thoma (RHT) material model for concrete is suitably calibrated/modified to reproduce the variable behavior of characteristic retrofitted columns with deficient internal steel reinforcement detailing, suffering nonuniform local concrete cracking and crushing or bulging and bar buckling. Similarly, the 3D FRP jacket or rope confinement models may account for damage distribution, local fracture initiation and different interfacial bonding conditions. The satisfactory accuracy of the reproduced experimental stress-strain envelope behavior enables the analytical investigation of several critical design parameters that are difficult to measure reliably during experiments. Additional parametric analyses are conducted to assess the effects of steel quality. The significant variation of the field of developed strains on the FRP jacket at the ultimate and of the developed strains and deformations on steel cages among different columns are thoroughly investigated. This advanced analytical insight may be directly utilized to address missing critical parameters and allow for more reliable FRP retrofit design of seismic resistant reinforced concrete (RC) columns. Further, it allows for arbitrary 3D seismic analysis of columns (loading, unloading, cyclic or loading rate effects or preloading) or addresses predamages.

4.
Polymers (Basel) ; 12(12)2020 Nov 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33266106

RESUMEN

The behaviour of reinforced concrete frames with masonry wall infills is influenced a lot by the stiffness and strength difference between the frame and the infill, causing early detrimental damage to the infill or to the critical concrete columns. The paper reports the results from shake table seismic tests on a full-scale reinforced concrete (RC) frame building with modified hollow clay block (orthoblock brick) infill walls, within INMASPOL SERA Horizon 2020 project. The building received innovative resilient protection using Polyurethane Flexible Joints (PUFJs) made of polyurethane resin (PU), applied at the frame-infill interface in different schemes. Further, PUs were used for bonding of glass fibre grids to the weak masonry substrate to form Fibre Reinforced Polyurethanes (FRPUs) as an emergency repair intervention. The test results showed enhancement in the in-plane and out-of-plane infill performance under seismic excitations. The results confirmed remarkable delay of significant infill damages at very high RC frame inter-story drifts as a consequence of the use of PUFJs. Further, the PUFJ protection enabled the resilient repair of the infill even after very high inter-story drift of the structure up to 3.7%. The applied glass FRPU system efficiently protected the damaged infills against collapse under out-of-plane excitation while they restored large part of their in-plane stiffness.

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