2 research outputs found
Shear strength of reinforced concrete dapped-end beams using mechanism analysis.
yesA mechanism analysis based on the upper-bound theorem of concrete plasticity is developed to predict the critical
failure plane and corresponding shear capacity of reinforced concrete dapped-end beams. Failure modes observed in
physical tests of reinforced concrete dapped-end beams are idealised as an assemblage of two moving blocks separated
by a failure surface of displacement discontinuity. The developed mechanism analysis rationally represents the effect of
different parameters on failure modes; as a result, the predicted shear capacity is in good agreement with test results.
On the other hand, empirical equations specified in the Precast/Prestressed Concrete Institute design method and strutand-tie
model based on ACI 318-05 highly underestimate test results. The shear capacity of dapped-end beams predicted
by the mechanism analysis and strut-and-tie model decreases with the increase of shear span-to-full beam depth ratio
when failure occurs along diagonal cracks originating at the bottom corner of the full-depth beam, although the shear
span-to-full beam depth ratio is ignored in the Precast/Prestressed Concrete Institute design method
Shear capacity of reinforced concrete corbels using mechanism analysis
A mechanism analysis is developed to predict the shear capacity of reinforced concrete corbels. Based on shear failure observed in experimental tests, kinematically admissible failure mechanisms are idealised as an assemblage of two rigid blocks separated by a failure plane of displacement discontinuity. Shear capacity predictions obtained from the developed mechanism analysis are in better agreement with corbel test results of a comprehensive database compiled from the available literature than other existing models for corbels. The developed mechanism model shows that the shear capacity of corbels generally decreases with the increase of shear span-to-depth ratio, increases with the increase of main longitudinal reinforcement up to a certain limit beyond which it remains constant, and decreases with the increase of horizontal applied loads. It also demonstrates that the smaller the shear span-to-overall depth ratio of corbels, the more effective the horizontal shear reinforcement