scholarly journals Aspects of Vibration-Based Methods for the Prestressing Estimate in Concrete Beams with Internal Bonded or Unbonded Tendons

2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (6) ◽  
pp. 83
Author(s):  
Angelo Aloisio

The estimate of internal prestressing in concrete beams is essential for the assessment of their structural reliability. Many scholars have tackled multiple and diverse methods to estimate the measurable effects of prestressing. Among them, many experimented with dynamics-based techniques; however, these clash with the theoretical independence of the natural frequencies of the forces of internally prestressed beams. This paper examines the feasibility of a hybrid approach based on dynamic identification and the knowledge of the elastic modulus. Specifically, the author considered the effect of the axial deformation on the beam length and the weight per unit of volume. It is questioned whether the uncertainties related to the estimate of the elastic modulus and the first natural frequency yield reasonable estimates of the internal prestressing. The experimental testing of a set of full-scale concrete girders with known design prestressing supports a discussion about its practicability. The author found that the uncertainty in estimating the natural frequencies and elastic modulus significantly undermines a reliable estimate of the prestressing state.

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (15) ◽  
pp. 3168
Author(s):  
Bingbing San ◽  
Yunlong Ma ◽  
Zhi Xiao ◽  
Dongming Feng ◽  
Liwei Yin

This work investigates the natural vibration characteristics of free-form shells when considering the influence of uncertainties, including initial geometric imperfection, shell thickness deviation, and elastic modulus deviation. Herein, free-form shell models are generated while using a self-coded optimization algorithm. The Latin hypercube sampling (LHS) method is used to draw the samplings of uncertainties with respect to their stochastic probability models. ANSYS finite element (FE) software is adopted to analyze the natural vibration characteristics and compute the natural frequencies. The mean values, standard deviations, and cumulative distributions functions (CDFs) of the first three natural frequencies are obtained. The partial correlation coefficient is adopted to rank the significances of uncertainty factors. The study reveals that, for the free-form shells that were investigated in this study, the natural frequencies is a random quantity with a normal distribution; elastic modulus deviation imposes the greatest effect on natural frequencies; shell thickness ranks the second; geometrical imperfection ranks the last, with a much lower weight than the other two factors, which illustrates that the shape of the studied free-form shells is robust in term of natural vibration characteristics; when the supported edges are fixed during the shape optimization, the stochastic characteristics do not significantly change during the shape optimization process.


2011 ◽  
Vol 368-373 ◽  
pp. 2483-2490
Author(s):  
Yao Ting Zhang ◽  
Yi Zheng ◽  
Hong Jian Li

A dynamic test of two unbonded fully prestressed concrete beams has been conducted. The results indicate that the natural frequency of beams increases with the prestress force, which is opposite to the analytical arguments for homogeneous and isotropic beams subject to axial force. This paper explains the change in frequencies by discussing the change in the elastic modulus. A modified formula is also proposed, and the experimental data agree well with the theoretical analysis.


2018 ◽  
Vol 21 (13) ◽  
pp. 1977-1989 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tengfei Xu ◽  
Jiantao Huang ◽  
Arnaud Castel ◽  
Renda Zhao ◽  
Cheng Yang

In this article, experiments focusing at the influence of steel–concrete bond damage on the dynamic stiffness of cracked reinforced concrete beams are reported. In these experiments, the bond between concrete and reinforcing bar was damaged using appreciate flexural loads. The static stiffness of cracked reinforced concrete beam was assessed using the measured load–deflection response under cycles of loading and unloading, and the dynamic stiffness was analyzed using the measured natural frequencies with and without sustained loading. Average moment of inertia model (Castel et al. model) for cracked reinforced beams by taking into account the respective effect of bending cracks (primary cracks) and the steel–concrete bond damage (interfacial microcracks) was adopted to calculate the static load–deflection response and the natural frequencies of the tested beams. The experimental results and the comparison between measured and calculated natural frequencies show that localized steel–concrete bond damage does not influence remarkably the dynamic stiffness and the natural frequencies both with and without sustained loading applied. Castel et al. model can be used to calculate the dynamic stiffness of cracked reinforced concrete beam by neglecting the effect of interfacial microcracks.


1999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vebil Yildirim ◽  
Erol Sancaktar ◽  
Erhan Kiral

Abstract This paper deals with the effect of the material types (Graphite-Epoxies and Kevlar-Epoxy) on the fundamental frequencies of uniaxial constant-pitch composite conical helical springs with solid circle section and fixed-fixed ends. The transfer matrix method is used for the determination of the fundamental natural frequencies. The rotary inertia, the shear and axial deformation effects are taken into account in the solution. The free vibrational charts for each material presented in this study cover the following vibrational parameters: n (number of active turns) = 5–10, α = (helix pitch angle) = 5° and 25°, R2/R1, (minimum to maximum radii of the cylinder) = 0.1 and 0.9, and Dmax/d (maximum cylinder to wire diameters) = 5 and 15. These charts can be used for the design of uniaxial composite conical springs.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-105
Author(s):  
T. Makovkina ◽  
◽  
M. Surianinov ◽  
O. Chuchmai ◽  
◽  
...  

Analytical, experimental and numerical results of determination of natural frequencies and forms of oscillations of reinforced concrete and fiber concrete beams are given. Modern analytical, numerical and experimental methods of studying the dynamics of reinforced concrete and fiber concrete beams are analyzed. The problem of determining the natural frequencies and forms of oscillations of reinforced concrete and fiber concrete beams at the initial modulus of elasticity and taking into account the nonlinear diagram of deformation of materials is solved analytically. Computer modeling of the considered constructions in four software complexes is done and the technique of their modal analysis on the basis of the finite element method is developed. Experimental researches of free oscillations of the considered designs and the comparative analysis of all received results are carried out. It is established that all involved complexes determine the imaginary frequency and imaginary form of oscillations. The frequency spectrum calculated by the finite element method is approximately 4% lower than that calculated analytically; the results of the calculation in SOFiSTiK differ by 2% from the results obtained in the PC LIRA; the discrepancy with the experimental data reaches 20%, and all frequencies calculated experimentally, greater than the frequencies calculated analytically or by the finite element method. This rather significant discrepancy is explained, according to the authors, by the incorrectness of the used dynamic model of the reinforced beam. The classical dynamics of structures is known to be based on the theory of linear differential equations, and the oscillations of structures are considered in relation to the unstressed initial state. It is obvious that in the study of free and forced oscillations of reinforced concrete building structures such an approach is unsuitable because they are physically nonlinear systems. The concept of determining the nonlinear terms of these equations is practically not studied. Numerous experimental researches and computer modeling for the purpose of qualitative and quantitative detection of all factors influencing a spectrum of natural frequencies of fluctuations are necessary here.


2012 ◽  
Vol 19 (6) ◽  
pp. 1167-1180 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.M. Yu ◽  
Y. Hao

Free vibration equations for non-cylindrical (conical, barrel, and hyperboloidal types) helical springs with noncircular cross-sections, which consist of 14 first-order ordinary differential equations with variable coefficients, are theoretically derived using spatially curved beam theory. In the formulation, the warping effect upon natural frequencies and vibrating mode shapes is first studied in addition to including the rotary inertia, the shear and axial deformation influences. The natural frequencies of the springs are determined by the use of improved Riccati transfer matrix method. The element transfer matrix used in the solution is calculated using the Scaling and Squaring method and Pad'e approximations. Three examples are presented for three types of springs with different cross-sectional shapes under clamped-clamped boundary condition. The accuracy of the proposed method has been compared with the FEM results using three-dimensional solid elements (Solid 45) in ANSYS code. Numerical results reveal that the warping effect is more pronounced in the case of non-cylindrical helical springs than that of cylindrical helical springs, which should be taken into consideration in the free vibration analysis of such springs.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 2869 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhenpeng Wang ◽  
Minshui Huang ◽  
Jianfeng Gu

To study the variations in modal properties of a reinforced concrete (RC) slab (such as natural frequencies, mode shapes and damping ratios) under the influence of ambient temperature, a laboratory RC slab is monitored for over a year, the simple linear regression (LR) and autoregressive with exogenous input (ARX) models between temperature and frequencies are established and validated, and a damage identification based on particle swarm optimization (PSO) is utilized to detect the assumed damage considering temperature effects. Firstly, the vibration testing is performed for one year and the variations of natural frequencies, mode shapes and damping ratios under different ambient temperatures are analyzed. The obtained results show that the change of ambient temperature causes a major change of natural frequencies, which, on the contrary, has little effect on damping ratios and modal shapes. Secondly, based on a theoretical derivation analysis of natural frequency, the models are determined from experimental data on the healthy structure, and the functional relationship between temperature and elastic modulus is obtained. Based on the monitoring data, the LR model and ARX model between structural elastic modulus and ambient temperature are acquired, which can be used as the baseline of future damage identification. Finally, the established ARX model is validated based on a PSO algorithm and new data from the assumed 5% uniform damage and 10% uniform damage are compared with the models. If the eigenfrequency exceeds the certain confidence interval of the ARX model, there is probably another cause that drives the eigenfrequency variations, such as structural damage. Based on the constructed ARX model, the assumed damage is identified accurately.


Author(s):  
Costantino Carmignani ◽  
Paola Forte ◽  
Gabriele Melani ◽  
Giovanni Di Carlo

Aircraft transmissions have the peculiar characteristics of light structures and high operating speeds, therefore relatively low flexural natural frequencies and high excitation frequencies due to rotation and meshing. Thus some dynamic phenomena, such as traveling wave vibration (TWV), can be more easily encountered. However few papers can be found in the literature on TWV of gears while on the contrary it might be a problem especially for gears having thin rim and disk. This paper deals with the simulation of the disk TWV of bevel gears. 3D FEM is used to obtain the natural modes and frequencies of the gear. The response of a simplified non-rotating model of two meshing gears was entirely simulated in an Ansys environment. The numerical tests were performed considering a variable torque applied to one of the gears, the other being constrained, accounting for the meshing excitation. To simulate the rotating contact condition with respect to the gear reference systems, the dof of the nodes in contact of the two gears were coupled. Preliminary tests were performed considering one of the two gears rigid. The simulation of the TWV of gears makes it possible to identify the most critical conditions for stress and fatigue in the gear disks and therefore estimate the gear structural reliability.


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