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Effects of strain hardening of steel reinforcement on flexural strength and ductility of concrete beams

  • Ho, J.C.M. (Department of Civil Engineering, The University of Hong Kong) ;
  • Au, F.T.K. (Department of Civil Engineering, The University of Hong Kong) ;
  • Kwan, A.K.H. (Department of Civil Engineering, The University of Hong Kong)
  • Received : 2002.06.17
  • Accepted : 2004.09.21
  • Published : 2005.01.30

Abstract

In the design of reinforced concrete beams, it is a standard practice to use the yield stress of the steel reinforcement for the evaluation of the flexural strength. However, because of strain hardening, the tensile strength of the steel reinforcement is often substantially higher than the yield stress. Thus, it is a common belief that the actual flexural strength should be higher than the theoretical flexural strength evaluated with strain hardening ignored. The possible increase in flexural strength due to strain hardening is a two-edge sword. In some cases, it may be treated as strength reserve contributing to extra safety. In other cases, it could lead to greater shear demand causing brittle shear failure of the beam or unexpected greater capacity of the beam causing violation of the strong column-weak beam design philosophy. Strain hardening may also have certain effect on the flexural ductility. In this paper, the effects of strain hardening on the post-peak flexural behaviour, particularly the flexural strength and ductility, of reinforced normal- and high-strength concrete beams are studied. The results reveal that the effects of strain hardening could be quite significant when the tension steel ratio is relatively small.

Keywords

References

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