Strengthening with Prestressed CFRP Strips of Box Girders on the Chofu Bridge, Japan

Author(s):  
Masami Fujita ◽  
Terumitsu Takahashi ◽  
Kazuhiro Kuzume ◽  
Tamon Ueda ◽  
Akira Kobayashi

<p>Reinforced concrete (RC) box girders of the Chofu Bridge had been strengthened using tensioned carbon fibre reinforced polymer (CFRP) strip method. Before and after the CFRP application, on-site load tests of the bridge were conducted using a 45 t weight vehicle.</p>

2017 ◽  
Vol 20 (11) ◽  
pp. 1658-1670 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shizhu Tian ◽  
Hongxing Jia ◽  
Yuanzheng Lin

The behaviour of bridge columns strengthened using carbon fibre–reinforced polymer composites has been studied extensively. However, few investigations have been conducted regarding the influence of carbon fibre–reinforced polymer-strengthened columns on the seismic behaviour of reinforced concrete continuous girder bridges. This article details the hybrid simulations of a continuous reinforced concrete girder bridge whose columns are strengthened by carbon fibre–reinforced polymer jackets. In the hybrid simulations, one ductile column is selected as the experimental element, which is represented by a 1/2.5-scale specimen, and the remaining bridge parts are simultaneously modelled in OpenSees (the Open System for Earthquake Engineering Simulation). After combining the experimental element and the numerical substructure, the hybrid analysis model is developed with the established hybrid simulation system. The displacements of the bridge and the lateral force–displacement response of the experimental element in hybrid simulation are obtained. Compared with the results of numerical simulation, the stability and accuracy of the established hybrid simulation system are demonstrated. Meanwhile, the comparative hybrid simulation results of the as-built bridge and the carbon fibre–reinforced polymer-strengthened bridge also prove the effectiveness of the carbon fibre–reinforced polymer jackets’ confinement in the continuous reinforced concrete girder bridge.


2000 ◽  
Vol 27 (5) ◽  
pp. 1005-1010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khaled A Soudki ◽  
Ted G Sherwood

The viability of carbon fibre reinforced polymer (CFRP) laminates for the strengthening of corrosion damaged reinforced concrete bridge girders is addressed in this paper. Ten reinforced concrete beams (100 × 150 × 1200 mm) with variable chloride levels (0-3%) were constructed. Six beams were strengthened by externally epoxy bonding CFRP laminates to the concrete surface. The tensile reinforcements of three unstrengthened and four strengthened specimens were subjected to accelerated corrosion by means of impressed current to 5, 10, and 15% mass loss. Strain gauges were placed on the CFRP laminates to monitor and quantify tensile strains induced by the corrosion process. Following the corrosion phase, the specimens were tested in flexure in a four-point bending regime. Test results revealed that CFRP laminates successfully confined the corrosion cracking, and the total expansion of the laminate exhibited an exponential increase throughout the corrosion process. All the strengthened beams exhibited increased stiffness over the unstrengthened specimens and marked increases in the yield and ultimate strength. The CFRP strengthening scheme was able to restore the capacity of corrosion damaged concrete beams up to 15% mass loss.Key words: CFRP laminates, corrosion, confinement, expansion, load tests, strengthening, bond strength, reinforced concrete.


2005 ◽  
Vol 32 (6) ◽  
pp. 1093-1102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catalin Gheorghiu ◽  
Jamal Eddine Rhazi ◽  
Pierre Labossière

This paper reports on the potential of using the impact resonance method (IRM) for detecting fatigue damage in strengthened reinforced concrete (RC) beams. In this experimental program, 1.2 m long RC beams strengthened with a carbon fibre reinforced polymer (CFRP) plate have been employed. The specimens were subjected to fatigue loading under four-point bending for up to 2 × 106 cycles at 3 Hz. The load amplitude was varying from 15% to 75% of the cycles yielding load of the beam. Throughout fatigue testing, the cycling was stopped for IRM measurements to be taken. The obtained data provided information about changes in modal properties, such as, fundamental frequencies and damping ratios. Moreover, the results have shown that the IRM technique was successfully employed in laboratory for detecting fatigue damage in concrete beams strengthened with CFRP laminates.Key words: impact resonance method, modal properties, RC beam, FRP-strengthening, fatigue test, cracking.


2005 ◽  
Vol 32 (5) ◽  
pp. 812-824 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesco Bencardino ◽  
Vincenzo Colotti ◽  
Giuseppe Spadea ◽  
Ramnath Narayan Swamy

The aim of this paper is to clarify the structural performance of reinforced concrete (RC) beams with weak or without any internal shear reinforcement and externally strengthened in flexure with carbon fibre reinforced polymer (CFRP) laminates, when subjected to a shear-dominant-loading regime. Seven RC beams were specifically designed, without and with an external anchorage system, which was carefully detailed to enhance the benefits of the strengthening laminate and counteract the destructive effects of shear forces. All the beams were identical in terms of their geometry, longitudinal internal reinforcement, and concrete strength but varied, to highlight the role of shear behavior, in terms of their internal and external shear reinforcement as well as in their loading test regime. The beams were tested under four-point bending and extensively instrumented to monitor strains, deflection, cracking, load carrying capacity, and failure modes. The structural response of the tested beams has, then, been critically analyzed in terms of deformability, strength, and failure processes that occur under a shear-dominant loading regime. It is shown that with a carefully designed anchorage system, a brittle behavior without yielding of tension steel reinforcement of a flexural strengthened beam can be transformed to a less brittle behavior with yielding of tension steel reinforcement and a well-defined enhancement of structural performance in terms of both deformation and strength. The results presented in this paper should enable engineers to counteract shear failure of externally strengthened beams with little or even no internal shear reinforcement.Key words: carbon fibre reinforced polymer, shear behavior, external flexural strengthening, structural performance.


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