Precast Dapped End - Nonlinear Analysis

2021 ◽  
Vol 322 ◽  
pp. 106-110
Author(s):  
Lukáš Juříček ◽  
Miloš Zich ◽  
Michal Hasa ◽  
Petra Komárková ◽  
Lukáš Bobek

The article follows the results from the experiments published at the conferences Concrete days 2014 [1] and 2016 [2], in the paper [3], and also in the magazine Beton TKS [4]. The goal of the experiment was the verification of dapped ends with the different configuration of the hanger stirrups. Subsequently, the nonlinear analyses were performed in the scientific program ATENA. In this article, a new comparison with calculations using the CSFM (Compatible Stress Field Method), implemented in software IDEA StatiCa Detail, is performed

2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 291-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
Berenice Rojo-Garibaldi ◽  
David Alberto Salas-de-León ◽  
María Adela Monreal-Gómez ◽  
Norma Leticia Sánchez-Santillán ◽  
David Salas-Monreal

Abstract. Hurricanes are complex systems that carry large amounts of energy. Their impact often produces natural disasters involving the loss of human lives and materials, such as infrastructure, valued at billions of US dollars. However, not everything about hurricanes is negative, as hurricanes are the main source of rainwater for the regions where they develop. This study shows a nonlinear analysis of the time series of the occurrence of hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea obtained from 1749 to 2012. The construction of the hurricane time series was carried out based on the hurricane database of the North Atlantic basin hurricane database (HURDAT) and the published historical information. The hurricane time series provides a unique historical record on information about ocean–atmosphere interactions. The Lyapunov exponent indicated that the system presented chaotic dynamics, and the spectral analysis and nonlinear analyses of the time series of the hurricanes showed chaotic edge behavior. One possible explanation for this chaotic edge is the individual chaotic behavior of hurricanes, either by category or individually regardless of their category and their behavior on a regular basis.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel Filipe Passos Sério Lourenço ◽  
Miguel Fernández Ruiz ◽  
Stein Atle Haugerud ◽  
Johan Blaauwendraad ◽  
Stathis Bousias ◽  
...  

Following the long-standing tradition of fib in promoting the use of consistent design methods, strut-and-tie models were formally incorporated in Model Code 1990 to serve as the design basis for discontinuity regions. This choice was largely acknowledged as a sound approach for design and was thereafter followed in many national standards. For Model Code 2010, some update and revision of the previous provisions was performed, but the scope of the method was particularly broadened by introducing its complementary use with the stress field method. Since Model Code 2010, significant new knowledge has been generated in this topic. Particularly, the use of software implementing the theoretical ground of the stress field method is becoming increasingly popular and efficient, allowing for design, optimisation and assessment of structures in a simple, transparent and accessible manner. In this Bulletin, the current state-of-the-art of the strut-and-tie models (STM) and the stress field models (SFM) is presented. Reference is not only made to classical rigid-plastic solutions, but also to solutions considering compatibility of deformations, such as elastic-plastic approaches or models allowing investigation of serviceability behaviour and deformation capacity of concrete structures. It is shown in the Bulletin that all models share the same ground and fundamental hypotheses. Their results are presented in a unitary and consistent manner by means of compression fields in the concrete and stresses in the reinforcement. The consistency amongst these approaches and their potential use in practice is also explored by means of the Levels-of-Approximation (LoA) approach as described in Model Code 2010. Another effort in this Bulletin has been devoted to provide comparisons of the solutions according to strut-and-tie and stress fields to tests, in order to discuss on their pertinence and limitations. This perspective is also completed with practical examples presented of structures actually designed with this technique and where the potential of these methods can be appreciated in a clear manner. Finally, a number of special topics are also covered in the Bulletin, related to numerical optimisation, verifications at serviceability states, minimum reinforcement or the applicability of the methods under cyclic or reversal actions. This Bulletin not only aims to give state-of-the-art rules and methods to design according to these techniques, but also to provide an outlook of how these methods could be implemented in future standards. This material also serves as the background document for the revision of the current provisions of Model Code 2010 in the new Model Code 2020.


2020 ◽  
Vol 309 ◽  
pp. 157-162
Author(s):  
Lukáš Bobek ◽  
Lukáš Juříček ◽  
Michal Číhal ◽  
Jaromír Kabeláč ◽  
Michael Konečný

Reinforced corbels are frequently used in industrial halls. A number of existing corbels are prestressed by unbonded tendons or bars in order to increase their load-bearing capacity, decrease the deflections and restrain cracks spreading. The goal of the project was experimental validation of the reinforced concrete corbel strengthened using unbonded tendons via CSFM (Compatible Stress Field Method). The method is based on materially nonlinear calculation considering the tension stiffening effect of rebars and compression softening of concrete. These effects and other assumptions implemented in CSFM capture real behavior of reinforced concrete members. Besides, CSFM is verified using an independent analysis, which is based on similar assumptions as those in Compatible Stress Field Method.


2013 ◽  
Vol 333 ◽  
pp. 83-89
Author(s):  
Bartek Wierzba ◽  
Marek Danielewski ◽  
Andrzej Nowotnik ◽  
Jan Sieniawski

In this paper we couple the bi-velocity with the phase field method. It deals with: (1) the different mobility of the components in the two-phase zone; (2) nonzero steps of molar volumes for each component from phase to phase and (3) the composition dependent interdiffusion coefficients. The method allows to determine the average stress field during the diffusion process, the kinetics of the reactions and estimate the entropy production. The paper presents the numerical computations of diffusion in th eNiAlCr system. The results can serve as a basis in designing gradient coatings of extended life time.


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