Experimental Program and Full-Scale Load Tests on PC Deck Beams

Author(s):  
Francesco Tondolo ◽  
Fabio Biondini ◽  
Donato Sabia ◽  
Gianpaolo Rosati ◽  
Bernardino Chiaia ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Giacomino Bandini ◽  
Paride Meloni ◽  
Massimiliano Polidori ◽  
Calogera Lombardo

The PERSEO experimental program was performed in the framework of a domestic research program on innovative safety systems with the purpose to increase the reliability of passive decay heat removal systems implementing in-pool heat exchangers. The conceived system was tested at SIET laboratories by modifying the existing PANTHERS IC-PCC facility utilized in the past for testing a full scale module of the GE-SBWR in-pool heat exchanger. Integral tests and stability tests were conducted to verify the operating principles, the steadiness and the effectiveness of the system. Two of the more representative tests have been analyzed with CATHARE V2.5 for code validation purposes. The paper deals with the comparison of code results against experimental data. The capabilities and the limits of the code in simulating such kind of tests are highlighted. An improvement in the modeling of the large water reserve pool is suggested trying to reduce the discrepancies observed between code results and test measurements.


2004 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 133-145 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aftab A Mufti ◽  
Baidar Bakht ◽  
Dagmar Svecova ◽  
Vidyadhar Limaye

Grout laminated wood decks (GLWDs), representing the third generation of stressed wood decks, comprise either laminates or logs trimmed to obtain two parallel faces. The logs or laminates, running along the span, are held together by means of transverse internal grout cylinders that may be in either compression or tension. Two full-scale models of GLWD were constructed at Dalhousie University, Halifax, one with grout cylinders in compression and the other with the cylinders in tension. Service load tests conducted in Halifax showed that the former deck had better load distribution characteristics. Two years after the tests in Halifax, the models were shipped to The University of Manitoba in Winnipeg, where they were tested to failure under a central patch load. Because of miscommunication with the supplier, the logs of the GLWD with grout cylinders in compression were also trimmed to the third face that was kept at the bottom of the deck. The failure tests showed that despite its superior load distribution characteristics, the deck with grout cylinders in compression failed at a significantly lower load than the GLWD with cylinders in tension. It is argued that a planar surface in the logs at the flexural tension face not only reduces their flexural stiffness but also brings the defects of wood to the surface with maximum stress. The deck with the flat bottom surface underwent tension failure of the most heavily loaded logs, whereas the deck with the intact round surface of the logs at both top and bottom failed by horizontal splitting of all the logs.Key words: articulated plate, bridge deck, grout laminated deck, orthotropic plate, timber.


Author(s):  
Moncef Souissi

The capacity-to-torque ratio, Kt, has been used in the design of helical piles and anchors for over half a century. Numerous research efforts have been conducted to accurately predict this capaci-ty-to-torque ratio. However, almost of all these Kt factors are based on shaft geometry alone. The ca-pacity-to-torque ratio described herein was found to depend on the shaft diameter, shaft geometry, helix configuration, axial load direction, and installation torque. In this study, 799 full scale static load tests in compression and tension were conducted on helical piles of varying shaft diameters, shaft geometry, and helix configurations in different soil types (sand, clay, and weathered bedrock). The collected data were used to study the effect of these variables on the capacity-to-torque ratio and resulted in developing a more reliable capacity-to-torque ratio, Km, that considers the effect of the variables mentioned above. The study shows that the published Kt values in AC358 (ICC-ES Acceptance Criteria for Helical Piles Systems and Devices) underestimate the pile capacity at low torque and overestimate it at high torque. In addition, and based on probability analysis, the predicted capacity using the modified Km results in a higher degree of accuracy than the one based on the published Kt values in AC358.


1976 ◽  
Vol 102 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-105
Author(s):  
Jai B. Kim ◽  
Robert J. Brungraber

1977 ◽  
Vol 103 (10) ◽  
pp. 1187-1190
Author(s):  
Jai B. Kim ◽  
Robert J. Brungraber

2011 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 319-330 ◽  
Author(s):  
Reem Sabouni ◽  
M.H. El Naggar

Circular precast concrete manholes are widely used in sanitary sewer and storm water systems. The lack of detailed technical information on them and the conservatism of their governing codes and standards call for a detailed investigation on them. The main objectives of this paper are to evaluate the state of strains in the precast concrete manhole and state of stresses in the soil beneath the base to be used in developing enhanced guidelines for the design of their bases. Three full-scale circular precast concrete manholes, two 1200 mm in diameter and one 1500 mm in diameter, were tested in the large-scale geotechnical testing facility (LSGTF) at the University of Western Ontario. Only one 1200 mm manhole base was reinforced. Twenty seven load tests were performed on the manholes, which involved loads representing the Ontario truck loads incorporated in the Canadian Highway Bridge Code. None of the manhole sections tested in the experimental program experienced any cracks. The test results showed that traffic loading had a small effect on the pressure under the manhole base. All three specimens could withstand the critical Ontario truck loads, even the non-reinforced ones.


2013 ◽  
Vol 50 (4) ◽  
pp. 454-455 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Salgado ◽  
Yanbei Zhang ◽  
Guoliang Dai ◽  
Weiming Gong
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
K. McGrattan ◽  
A. Lock ◽  
N. Marsh ◽  
M. Nyden ◽  
J. Dreisbach ◽  
...  

CHRISTIFIRE (Cable Heat Release, Ignition, and Spread in Tray Installations during FIRE) is a U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Office of Research program to quantify the mass and energy released from burning electrical cables. This type of quantitative information will be used to develop more realistic models of cable fires for use in fire probabilistic risk assessment (PRA) analyses. The experimental program has two main thrusts—bench-scale measurements of small samples of burning cables and full-scale measurements of the heat release and fire-spread rates of cables burning within typical ladder-type trays. The bench-scale measurements include micro-calorimetry of cable components, effluent characterization using absorption spectroscopy, and measurements of the heat release rate using a cone calorimeter. The full-scale measurements include the burning of a variety of cables within a typical tray under radiant panel heating, and full-scale, multiple tray fires. The outcome of the experiments is to be used by a variety of fire models, ranging from simple correlations to computational fluid dynamics.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document