Experimental and numerical analysis of strain gradient in tensile concrete prisms reinforced with multiple bars
[Display omitted] •Deformation behavior of concrete is dependent on arrangement of the reinforcement.•A new test methodology of concrete prisms with multiple bars is presented.•The design concept and the components of the test setup are explained.•Average deformations of concrete and reinforcement a...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Construction & building materials 2018-10, Vol.187, p.572-583 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | [Display omitted]
•Deformation behavior of concrete is dependent on arrangement of the reinforcement.•A new test methodology of concrete prisms with multiple bars is presented.•The design concept and the components of the test setup are explained.•Average deformations of concrete and reinforcement are different.•Finite element technique as a versatile tool for analysis of the strain gradient.
This work is a continuation of the ongoing research on deformation behavior of reinforced concrete elements under tension. The previous studies have revealed that deformation behaviors of elements reinforced with multiple bars and the traditional prismatic members reinforced with a center bar are essentially different. The latter layout, though typical of laboratory specimens, could not represent the norm of structures in real-life. Thus, a new test methodology to investigate the strain distribution in concrete prismatic members reinforced with multiple bars subjected to axial tension is devised. Prismatic concrete specimens with different reinforcement configurations were fabricated and tested using the proposed setup. Deformation behavior of the specimens is modeled with a tailor-designed bond modeling approach for rigorous finite element analysis. It is revealed that the average deformations of the concrete could be different from the prevailing approach of average deformations of the steel, and are dependent on the reinforcement configurations. Therefore, the efficiency of concrete in tension should be carefully taken into account for rational design of structural elements. The study endorses promising abilities of finite element technique as a versatile analysis tool whose full potential is to be revealed with the advent of computer hardware. |
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ISSN: | 0950-0618 1879-0526 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.conbuildmat.2018.07.152 |