BEHAVIOR OF REINFORCED CONCRETE BEAM-COLUMN JOINTS IN THE PLASTIC STATE SUBJECTED TO REPEATED SEISMIC LOAD WITH LONG DURATION

2012 ◽  
Vol 77 (677) ◽  
pp. 1123-1129
Author(s):  
Kaori SAWAGUCHI ◽  
Kouji YAMANOBE ◽  
Takehiko TERADA
Author(s):  
Arya Prakash

Concrete is good in compression and weak in tension and the steel is strong in tension. So the use of reinforced concrete to resist compression and to hold bars in position and to the steel resist tension. In India RCC structures are commonly used in residential as well as business buildings. Nowadays the Post Tensioning method is widely used due to its advantages. Post tensioning is a form of prestressing, that means the steel is stressed before the concrete has to support the service loads. In this paper is exposed to the assessment of execution of Reinforced concrete beam (RCC beam) and Post-Tensioning beam (PT beam) multistoried building structure framework with seismic load using ETABS software. And also evaluate the performance of PT beam under different seismic zone (zone I, zone II) evaluate the performance of PT beam under soil type (medium soil) and compare the performance of RCC deep beam and PT beam with multistory building system with seismic loading performance.


CORROSION ◽  
1988 ◽  
Vol 44 (10) ◽  
pp. 761-765 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Feliu ◽  
J. A. Gonzalez ◽  
C. Andrade ◽  
V. Feliu

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pavlina Mateckova ◽  
Zuzana Marcalikova ◽  
David Bujdoš ◽  
Marie Kozielova

Author(s):  
Soffian Noor Mat Saliah ◽  
Noorsuhada Md Nor ◽  
Noorhazlinda Abd Rahman ◽  
Shahrum Abdullah ◽  
Mohd Subri Tahir

Author(s):  
Diego L. Castañeda-Saldarriaga ◽  
Joham Alvarez-Montoya ◽  
Vladimir Martínez-Tejada ◽  
Julián Sierra-Pérez

AbstractSelf-sensing concrete materials, also known as smart concretes, are emerging as a promising technological development for the construction industry, where novel materials with the capability of providing information about the structural integrity while operating as a structural material are required. Despite progress in the field, there are issues related to the integration of these composites in full-scale structural members that need to be addressed before broad practical implementations. This article reports the manufacturing and multipurpose experimental characterization of a cement-based matrix (CBM) composite with carbon nanotube (CNT) inclusions and its integration inside a representative structural member. Methodologies based on current–voltage (I–V) curves, direct current (DC), and biphasic direct current (BDC) were used to study and characterize the electric resistance of the CNT/CBM composite. Their self-sensing behavior was studied using a compression test, while electric resistance measures were taken. To evaluate the damage detection capability, a CNT/CBM parallelepiped was embedded into a reinforced-concrete beam (RC beam) and tested under three-point bending. Principal finding includes the validation of the material’s piezoresistivity behavior and its suitability to be used as strain sensor. Also, test results showed that manufactured composites exhibit an Ohmic response. The embedded CNT/CBM material exhibited a dominant linear proportionality between electrical resistance values, load magnitude, and strain changes into the RC beam. Finally, a change in the global stiffness (associated with a damage occurrence on the beam) was successfully self-sensed using the manufactured sensor by means of the variation in the electrical resistance. These results demonstrate the potential of CNT/CBM composites to be used in real-world structural health monitoring (SHM) applications for damage detection by identifying changes in stiffness of the monitored structural member.


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