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1.
This paper presents the results of an experimental study to investigate the role of each layer of reinforcement on the behavior of concrete bridge deck slabs reinforced with fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP) bars. Four full-scale concrete deck slabs of 3,000?mm length by 2,500?mm width and 200?mm depth were constructed and tested in the laboratory. One deck slab was reinforced with top and bottom mats of glass FRP bars. Two deck slabs had only a bottom reinforcement mat with different reinforcement ratios in the longitudinal direction, while the remaining deck slab was constructed with plain concrete without any reinforcement. The deck slabs were supported on two steel girders spaced at 2,000?mm center to center and were tested to failure under a central concentrated load. The three reinforced concrete slabs had very similar behavior and failed in punching shear mode at relatively high load levels, whereas the unreinforced slab behaved differently and failed at a very low load level. The experimental punching capacities of the reinforced slabs were compared to the theoretical predictions provided by ACI 318-05, ACI 440.1R-06, and a model proposed by the writers. The tests on the four deck slabs showed that the bottom transverse reinforcement layer has the major influence on the behavior and capacity of the tested slabs. In addition, the ACI 318-05 design method slightly overestimated the punching shear strength of the tested slabs. The ACI 440.1R-06 design method yielded very conservative predictions whereas the proposed method provided reasonable yet conservative predictions.  相似文献   

2.
Four suspension bridges stiffened by prestressed concrete slabs were designed and constructed on highways in southwestern mountainous areas of China. These bridges are the first applications of its kind in China. This paper discusses the site condition, adaptability, and design and construction features of these bridges. These bridges have single suspension spans between 278 and 388?m and deck width between 14.4 and 15.0?m. The longitudinal distance between hangers is only 5?m, which is relatively small for this bridge type, and there are only two lanes. The dual direction prestressed concrete slabs are 0.6?m deep, and its wind blocking area is relatively small. Dynamic analysis and wind tunnel tests verify that the wind resistance requirements are easily satisfied.  相似文献   

3.
Since bridge deck slabs directly sustain repeated moving wheel loads, they are one of the most bridge elements susceptible to fatigue failure. Recently, glass fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP) composites have been widely used as internal reinforcement for concrete bridge deck slabs as they are less expensive compared to the other kinds of FRPs (carbon and aramid). However, there is still a lack of information on the performance of FRP–reinforced concrete elements subjected to cyclic fatigue loading. This research is designed to investigate the fatigue behavior and fatigue life of concrete bridge deck slabs reinforced with glass FRP bars. A total of five full-scale deck slabs were constructed and tested under concentrated cyclic loading until failure. Different reinforcement types (steel and glass FRP), ratios, and configurations were used. Different schemes of cyclic loading (accelerated variable amplitude fatigue loading) were applied. Results are presented in terms of deflections, strains in concrete and FRP bars, and crack widths at different levels of cyclic loading. The results showed the superior fatigue performance and longer fatigue life of concrete bridge deck slabs reinforced with glass FRP composite bars.  相似文献   

4.
This paper presents the results of a parametric study related to the wheel load distribution in one-span, simply supported, multilane, reinforced concrete slab bridges. The finite-element method was used to investigate the effect of span length, slab width with and without shoulders, and wheel load conditions on typical bridges. A total of 112 highway bridge case studies were analyzed. It was assumed that the bridges were stand-alone structures carrying one-way traffic. The finite-element analysis (FEA) results of one-, two-, three-, and four-lane bridges are presented in combination with four typical span lengths. Bridges were loaded with highway design truck HS20 placed at critical locations in the longitudinal direction of each lane. Two possible transverse truck positions were considered: (1) Centered loading condition where design trucks are assumed to be traveling in the center of each lane; and (2) edge loading condition where the design trucks are placed close to one edge of the slab with the absolute minimum spacing between adjacent trucks. FEA results for bridges subjected to edge loading showed that the AASHTO standard specifications procedure overestimates the bending moment by 30% for one lane and a span length less than 7.5 m (25 ft) but agrees with FEA bending moments for longer spans. The AASHTO bending moment gave results similar to those of the FEA when considering two or more lanes and a span length less than 10.5 m (35 ft). However, as the span length increases, AASHTO underestimates the FEA bending moment by 15 to 30%. It was shown that the presence of shoulders on both sides of the bridge increases the load-carrying capacity of the bridge due to the increase in slab width. An extreme loading scenario was created by introducing a disabled truck near the edge in addition to design trucks in other lanes placed as close as possible to the disabled truck. For this extreme loading condition, AASHTO procedure gave similar results to the FEA longitudinal bending moments for spans up to 7.5 m (25 ft) and underestimated the FEA (20 to 40%) for spans between 9 and 16.5 m (30 and 55 ft), regardless of the number of lanes. The new AASHTO load and resistance factor design (LRFD) bridge design specifications overestimate the bending moments for normal traffic on bridges. However, LRFD procedure gives results similar to those of the FEA edge+truck loading condition. Furthermore, the FEA results showed that edge beams must be considered in multilane slab bridges with a span length ranging between 6 and 16.5 m (20 and 55 ft). This paper will assist bridge engineers in performing realistic designs of simply supported, multilane, reinforced concrete slab bridges as well as evaluating the load-carrying capacity of existing highway bridges.  相似文献   

5.
It has been demonstrated, through laboratory investigations and various field projects, that the external bonding of fiber- reinforced polymer (FRP) laminates is an effective technique for the structural enhancement of reinforced concrete slabs. In such applications, failure is generally governed by debonding of the FRP laminate. Nevertheless, numerical simulations to date of FRP-strengthened slabs have usually been based on the assumption of full bond between the concrete and FRP. In this study, the interfacial behavior between the FRP laminates and the concrete substrate is accounted for by introducing appropriate bond-slip models for the interface in a nonlinear finite-element analysis of FRP-strengthened two-way slabs. The numerical model is capable of simulating slabs strengthened in shear or in flexure; it can be applied to arbitrary FRP configurations, and can also accommodate both passive as well as prestressed FRP strengthening schemes. Results are presented in terms of load-deflection relationships, ultimate load capacities, failure modes, and interfacial slip and stress distributions. When compared to test results reported in the literature, the analysis is shown to lead to excellent predictions in that, for the entire set of FRP-strengthened specimens considered, the average of the numerical-to-experimental load capacity ratios is 0.966, with a standard deviation of 0.066. Furthermore, in all cases when FRP debonding was observed experimentally, the analysis correctly predicted the mode of failure.  相似文献   

6.
Currently, estimations of the crack width in the deck slab of bridges given by codes of practice are based on either theoretical or empirical approaches considering mainly the monotonic loading behavior. However, cracking in reinforced tensile members is highly influenced by the loading history (including both the loading and unloading processes) because of the irreversible nonlinear behavior of bond and of tensile response of concrete, resulting into residual cracks of non-negligible width. This paper investigates the influence of this phenomenon and presents a physical model describing it. An analytical model is developed and its results are compared to various tests with good agreement. Finally, a simple design formula is derived and recommendations for its application to practical cases are proposed.  相似文献   

7.
The effect of a skew angle on simple-span reinforced concrete bridges is presented in this paper using the finite-element method. The parameters investigated in this analytical study were the span length, slab width, and skew angle. The finite-element analysis (FEA) results for skewed bridges were compared to the reference straight bridges as well as the American Association for State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) Standard Specifications and LRFD procedures. A total of 96 case study bridges were analyzed and subjected to AASHTO HS-20 design trucks positioned close to one edge on each bridge to produce maximum bending in the slab. The AASHTO Standard Specifications procedure gave similar results to the FEA maximum longitudinal bending moment for a skew angle less than or equal to 20°. As the skew angle increased, AASHTO Standard Specifications overestimated the maximum moment by 20% for 30°, 50% for 40°, and 100% for 50°. The AASHTO LRFD Design Specifications procedure overestimated the FEA maximum longitudinal bending moment. This overestimate increased with the increase in the skew angle, and decreased when the number of lanes increased; AASHTO LRFD overestimated the longitudinal bending moment by up to 40% for skew angles less than 30° and reaching 50% for 50°. The ratio between the three-dimensional FEA longitudinal moments for skewed and straight bridges was almost one for bridges with skew angle less than 20°. This ratio decreased to 0.75 for bridges with skew angles between 30 and 40°, and further decreased to 0.5 as the skew angle of the bridge increased to 50°. This decrease in the longitudinal moment ratio is offset by an increase of up to 75% in the maximum transverse moment ratio as the skew angle increases from 0 to 50°. The ratio between the FEA maximum live-load deflection for skewed bridges and straight bridges decreases in a pattern consistent with that of the longitudinal moment. This ratio decreased from one for skew angles less than 10° to 0.6 for skew angles between 40 and 50°.  相似文献   

8.
Full-depth precast deck slab cantilevers also referred to as full-depth precast concrete bridge deck overhang panels are becoming increasingly popular in concrete bridge deck construction. To date, no simple theory is able to estimate the overhang capacity of full-depth concrete bridge deck slabs accurately. Observations suggest that interaction between flexure and shear is likely to occur as neither alone provides an accurate estimate of the load-carrying capacity. Therefore, modified yield line theory is presented in this paper, which accounts for the development length of the mild steel reinforcing to reach yield strength. Failure of the full-depth panels is influenced by the presence of the partial-depth transverse panel-to-panel seam. When applying a load on the edge of the seam, the loaded panel fails under flexure while the seam fails in shear. Through the use of the modified yield line theory coupled with a panel-to-panel shear interaction, analytical predictions are accurate within 1–6% of experimental results for critical cases.  相似文献   

9.
For members with no transverse reinforcement, numerous models have been proposed for determining shear capacity, most often based on a statistical curve fit to experimental beam test results. The shear provisions of the Canadian code (CSA) for steel-reinforced concrete, by contrast, are based on a theoretical model, the modified compression field theory. This paper demonstrates that the CSA shear provisions for steel-reinforced members can be safely applied to members with internal fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP) bars by adjusting the term EsAs in the method to ErAr. A database of 146 shear failures of specimens reinforced with carbon, glass, or aramid FRP or steel is presented and gives an average test to predicted ratio of 1.38 with a coefficient of variation (COV) of 17.2%. The CSA code equations were optimized for the typical strain range of steel-reinforced concrete and when an equation appropriate for the wider range of strains associated with FRP is used, then a better statistical result can be achieved. Application of this expression to the database resulted in an average test to predicted strength ratio of 1.15 with a COV of 14.9%. As both methods are based on a theoretical shear model that was derived for steel-reinforced concrete and since both methods work safely, it can be concluded that the use of internal FRP bars does not change the one-way shear behavior of reinforced concrete beams and slabs without stirrups.  相似文献   

10.
Soil embankment settlement causes concrete approach slabs of bridges to lose their contact and support from the soil. When soil settlement occurs, the slab will bend in a concave manner that causes a sudden change in slope grade near its ends. Meanwhile, loads on the slab will also redistribute to the ends of the slab, which may result in faulting across the roadway at the ends of the approach slab. Eventually, the rideability of the bridge approach slab will deteriorate. The current American Association of State Highway Transportation Officials code specifications do not provide clear guidelines to design approach slabs considering the embankment settlements. State Departments of Transportation are spending millions of dollars each year to deal with problems near the ends of approach slabs. To investigate the effect of embankment settlements on the performance of the approach slab, a three-dimensional finite element analysis was conducted in the present study, considering the interaction between the approach slab and the embankment soil, and consequently the separation of the slab and soil. The predicted internal moments of the approach slab provide design engineers with a scientific basis to properly design the approach slab considering different levels of embankment settlements. A proper design of the approach slab will help mitigate the rideability problems of the slab.  相似文献   

11.
Testing results of six existing prestressed concrete bridges are used to evaluate analytical methodologies. These bridges cover different span lengths, number of lanes, and skew angles. Strains, load distribution factors, and ratings predicted by finite-element analyses and AASHTO code specifications are compared with those from measurements. The comparison reveals a significant difference between the analytical and test results due to the effects of many field factors. Factors that exist in reality but whose effects on bridge performance cannot easily be quantified are defined as field factors. Due to these field factors, existing bridges are different from idealized calculation models and are thus defined as field bridges. To examine this difference and to quantify their effects, some field factors are modeled in a more refined finite-element analysis. It is found that the field factors have a larger effect on the maximum strain than on the load distribution factor. Parametric studies of the effects of diaphragms, bearing stiffness, and skew angles on the load distribution and maximum strain are conducted.  相似文献   

12.
This paper presents findings of field tests and analysis of two conventionally reinforced concrete (CRC) deck girder bridges designed in the 1950s. The bridges are in-service and exhibit diagonal cracks. Stirrup strains in the bridge girders at high shear regions were used to estimate distribution factors for shear. Impact factors based on the field tests are reported. Comparison of field measured responses with AASHTO factors was performed. Three-dimensional elastic finite-element analysis was employed to model the tested bridges and determine distribution factors specifically for shear. Eight-node shell elements were used to model the decks, diaphragms, bent caps, and girders. Beam elements were used to model columns under the bent caps. The analytically predicted distribution factors were compared with the field test data. Finally, the bridge finite-element models were employed to compare load distribution factors for shear computed using procedures in the AASHTO LRFD and Standard Specifications.  相似文献   

13.
The present work deals with the numerical simulation of fiber reinforced polymers (FRP) poststrengthened scaled concrete slabs in order to predict their load carrying behavior. The used strengthening materials are FRPs which are of increasing interest in civil engineering applications such as textile reinforced concrete tubes, cables of cable-stayed bridges, or even entire bridges. The numerical results are compared with experiments which were conducted at the Univ. of California, San Diego, and are described in detail by H?rmann in 1997; H?rmann et al. in 1998; and later by Seim et al. in 2001. The slabs are modeled for the numerical simulation first in a two-dimensional design space, assuming a plane stress condition for the concrete and the fiber reinforced polymer, and second in a three-dimensional design space with multilayered shell elements in order to include the varying response across the depth of the slabs. The used material model for reinforced concrete was developed by Menrath et al. in 1998 and has been enhanced for multilayered shell elements by Haufe et al. in 1999. It is based on multisurface plasticity, consisting of two Drucker–Prager yield surfaces and a spherical cap, and exhibits fracture energy based evolution laws for the softening regime. The reinforcement is taken into account as additional stress contribution in a smeared manner using a one-dimensional constitutive law based on an elastoplastic isotropic hardening model.  相似文献   

14.
The feasibility of strengthening concrete slabs in flexure, with and without cutouts, using the mechanically fastened (MF) FRP technique is investigated. Two series of large-scale reinforced concrete slabs are tested. The first series is comprised of five slabs without a cutout, and measuring 2,600×2,600×120?mm; the second series consists of four slabs of the same dimensions with a central cutout measuring 800×800?mm. The mechanically fastened system is found to be a valid alternative to the externally bonded system resulting in a rapid, economic, and effective strengthening technique for two-way concrete slabs. The increases in ultimate capacities of the MF FRP-strengthened slabs range between 30 and 70% over those of the unstrengthened specimens. In addition, finite-element modeling of MF FRP-strengthened slabs is introduced in this study. The interfacial behavior between the MF FRPs and the concrete substrate is accounted for by using appropriate interfacial models. Very good agreement is obtained between the test results and the numerical predictions.  相似文献   

15.
In some terrorist attacks, it is possible that RC structures might be subjected to more than a single explosion. RC structures designed without the consideration of blast effects tend to lose their capacity after the first explosion. The use of a fiber reinforced polymer (FRP) sheet has been proven to enhance the performance and resistance of an RC member under a single explosion test. However, there appears to have been no experimental programs conducted to assess the performance of FRP-strengthened RC members subjected to multiple explosions reported in the literature. This paper, therefore, presents experimental results for the behavior of RC slabs strengthened by an FRP sheet after undergoing single, double, and triple independent explosion testing. Results from these blast tests indicate that the FRP sandwich RC slab tested was able to sustain the subsequent second explosion of greater impact. A brittle shear failure with FRP debonding was observed following the third explosion on this FRP-strengthened RC slab.  相似文献   

16.
A fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP) shear bolt system has been recently developed at the University of Waterloo in Canada. The system is used to protect previously built reinforced concrete (RC) slabs against brittle punching shear failure. The system requires drilling small holes in a RC slab around the perimeter of a column, inserting bolts into the holes, and anchoring the bolts at both external surfaces of the slab. Many existing RC slabs have been built without any shear reinforcement. Also, many of these slabs are in corrosive environments, e.g., parking garages, where the use of deicing salts accelerates reinforcement corrosion and concrete deterioration. Therefore, FRPs are ideal materials to be used for such retrofit. The challenge, however, is the development of mechanical end anchorages for FRP rods that are efficient, aesthetic, cost effective, and that can be installed on site. The research presented in this paper includes development of FRP bolts with mechanical anchorages and the results of testing done using the developed systems. A new anchorage technique for the FRP rods based on crimping the rod ends with the aluminum fittings was developed. The testing was done on isolated slab-column specimens representing interior slab-column connections in a continuous flat plate system. The specimens were subjected to simulated gravity loading. The developed FRP bolts worked very well in improving the performance of the slab-column connections and showing the benefits of using FRP in punching shear retrofit of reinforced concrete slabs in corrosive environments.  相似文献   

17.
This study was undertaken to address the effect of the main steel corrosion on the structural performance of RC slabs strengthened with carbon-fiber-reinforced polymer (CFRP) strips and exposed to a corrosive environment. A total of eight specimens (500×100×1,500?mm) were constructed and tested under monotonic static loading. Three specimens were CFRP-strengthened and corroded, three specimens were CFRP-strengthened and kept at room temperature, one specimen was unstrengthened and corroded, and one specimen was neither strengthened nor corroded. Three different strengthening schemes were applied: (1) externally bonded CFRP strips; (2) externally bonded CFRP strips provided with CFRP anchors; and (3) near surface mounted (NSM) CFRP strips. During the corrosion process, the specimens were placed in a small tank filled with sodium chloride (NaCl) solution concentration (3%) which covered only the slabs’ bottom third, and corrosion was induced by means of an impressed current. The corrosion process lasted for 20 days, and the average mass loss of the main steel reinforcement due to corrosion was 9%. Following corrosion, the specimens were tested under four-point bending. The experimental results showed that the increase in flexural capacity achieved using the three strengthening schemes were significantly reduced due to corrosion of the main steel. The recorded reductions in flexural strength gains for the CFRP-strengthened corroded slabs relative to the gains for the strengthened uncorroded slabs were about 55, 38, and 41% for the externally bonded CFRP system without anchors, externally bonded CFRP with anchors, and NSM-CFRP system, respectively.  相似文献   

18.
During freezing temperatures, ice accumulates on exposed concrete slabs such as bridge decks. Deicing salts such as calcium chloride are applied to control this ice formation. These salts migrate down to the reinforcing steel, and they can break down the passivation layer on steel, causing it to corrode. This paper is part of a broader research study to explore the possibility of opening the bridge decks earlier than the 10–12 days as practiced now, by decreasing the number of wet-mat curing days. Seven concrete mixtures typically used in Texas bridge decks were evaluated for chloride permeability using the ponding test (AASHTO T259). The primary experimental variables were the curing duration, type and percentage of supplemental cementitious materials, type of coarse aggregate, duration of ponding, and the surface preparation of ponded concrete specimens. Results of the investigation indicated that curing duration may be decreased for some concrete mixtures as no apparent improvement was shown after a specific curing duration, which ranged from 2 to 8 days depending on the mix.  相似文献   

19.
20.
A composite system consisting of rectangular glass fiber reinforced polymer (GFRP) tubes connected to concrete slabs, using GFRP dowels has been developed. Seven beam specimens have been tested, including hollow and concrete-filled GFRP tubes with and without concrete slabs. Beam–slab specimens had two different shear span-to-depth ratios and one specimen had carbon–fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP)-laminated tension flange for enhanced flexural performance. Additionally, three double-shear GFRP tube-slab assemblies have been tested to assess the shear behavior of GFRP dowels, in both hollow and concrete-filled tubes. Three compression stubs of concrete-filled tubes were also tested by loading them parallel to the cross-section plane, to study GFRP web buckling behavior. The study showed that GFRP dowels performed well in shear and that composite action is quite feasible. While hollow tubes can act compositely with concrete slabs, more slip between the tube and slab would occur, compared to a concrete-filled tube-slab system. Simplified models are proposed to predict critical web buckling load of fiber reinforced polymer (FRP) tubes. Based on the models, a critical shear span-to-depth ratio of 4 was determined, below which web buckling may occur before flexural failure.  相似文献   

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