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Tension stiffening model for lightly confined reinforced concrete elements

Authors :
John Wilson
Emad Gad
Scott J. Menegon
Nelson Lam
Source :
Magazine of Concrete Research. 73:366-378
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Thomas Telford Ltd., 2021.

Abstract

Reinforced concrete (RC) walls subject to in-plane lateral loads are essentially subject to axial compression and tension forces in the respective end regions of the wall. The tension forces initially result in elastic tensile stresses in both the concrete and longitudinal reinforcement. Cracking occurs after the maximum tensile stress of the concrete has been exceeded and results in the reinforcement providing the sole tensile resistance at each crack location. The mechanical interlock between the reinforcement and concrete means that a portion of the tensile stress in the reinforcement at each crack is transferred back into the concrete between adjacent cracks. This mechanism stiffens the concrete in tension and is referred to as tension stiffening. This paper presents a generalised tension stiffening model developed for limited ductile (i.e. lightly confined) RC walls. However, it is also applicable for lightly confined RC elements generally. The model was validated against 14 boundary element prism specimens subject to cyclic loading, with very good correlation observed between the theoretical model and the experimental results. This model can easily be adopted into a sectional analysis procedure to account for tension stiffening in both the elastic and inelastic regions of response in an RC wall.

Details

ISSN :
1751763X and 00249831
Volume :
73
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Magazine of Concrete Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e877f39a979a75b94bb32bb21690567a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1680/jmacr.20.00211