• Title/Summary/Keyword: concrete size effect

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Size Effect of Concrete Structures without Initial Cracks (초기균열이 없는 콘크리트 구조물의 크기에 따른 응력감소효과에 관한 연구)

  • Kim, Jin Keun;Park, Hong Kyee
    • KSCE Journal of Civil and Environmental Engineering Research
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    • v.7 no.2
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    • pp.29-36
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    • 1987
  • In most of the structural members with initial cracks, the strength tends to decrease as the member size increases. This phenomenon is known as size effect. Among the structural materials of glass, metal or concrete, etc., concrete represents the size effect even without initial crack. According to the previous size effect law, the concrete member of very large size can resist little stress. Actually, however, even the large size member can resist some stress if there is no initial notch. This means that the fracture mechanism of very small or very large size member follows strength criterion, but the medium size member follows non-linear fracture mechanics (NLFM). In this study, the empirical models which are derived based on nonlinear fracture mechanics are proposed according to the regression analysis with the existing test data of large size specimens for uni-axial compression test, splitting tensile test and shear test of reinforced concrete beams.

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Effect of rubber particles on properties and frost resistance of self-compacting concrete

  • Miao Liu;Jianhua Xiao;En Yang;Lijuan Su
    • Advances in concrete construction
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    • v.16 no.5
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    • pp.269-276
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    • 2023
  • In order to study the effect of rubber particle size and admixture on the frost resistance of self-compacting concrete, three self-compacting concrete specimens with equal volume replacement of fine aggregate by rubber particles of different particle sizes were prepared, while conventional self-compacting concrete was made as a comparison specimen. The degradation law of rubber aggregate self-compacted concrete under freeze-thaw cycles was investigated by fast-freezing method test. The results show that the rubber aggregate has some influence on the mechanical properties and freeze-thaw durability of the self-compacting concrete. With the increase of rubber aggregate, the compressive strength of self-compacting concrete gradually decreases, and the smaller the rubber aggregate particle size is, the smaller the effect on the compressive strength of the matrix; rubber aggregate can improve the frost resistance of self-compacting concrete, and the smaller the rubber particle size is, the more obvious the effect on the improvement of the frost resistance of the matrix under the same dosage. Through the research of this paper, it is recommended to use 60~80 purpose rubber aggregate and the substitution rate of 10% is chosen as the best effect.

A Proposal of Minimum Steel Ratio Considering Size Effect for Flexural Reinforced Concrete Member (크기효과가 고려된 철근콘크리트 휨 부재의 최소철근비 제안)

  • Yoo, Sung-Won;Her, Yoon
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Safety
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    • v.25 no.6
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    • pp.128-136
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    • 2010
  • In according with concrete structural design standard, it is common designing flexure reinforcement concrete to induce tension failure. So reinforcing ratio is limited to inducing tension failure. And maximum reinforcing ratio is regulated to protecting concrete compression strength caused by over reinforced building. Minimum reinforcing ratio is also limited in designing standard to protecting brittle failure as extremely using less reinforcing bar. But in minimum reinforcing ratio it is extremely conservative or it is sometimes impossible to induce stable tension-failure because they are depending on yield failure and experienced method and concrete designing standard strength. Therefore the purpose of the present paper is to evaluate the flexural behavior of minimum steel ratio of reinforced concrete of beams and to propose the guide-line of equation of minimum steel ratio by performing static flexural test of 16 beams according to size effect, number of steel, yielding stress of steel, and concrete compressive strength which are presumed effective variables. From experimental results, the equation of minimum steel ratio was newly proposed considered size effect.

Size Effect in the Fracture Behavior of Reinforced Concrete Members (철근콘크리트 부재의 파괴거동에 대한 크기 효과)

  • Kim, Dong-Baik;Kim, Woon-Hak;Paik, Shin-Won
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Safety
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    • v.13 no.4
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    • pp.292-299
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    • 1998
  • In this study, the size effect in flexural and shear behaviors of reinforced concrete beams with stirrup has been studied. The specimens of different size with same longitudinal reinforcement ratio are tested. The major variables of test include the size(relative depth) of the members as well as the longitudinal reinforcement ratios. The nominal resistances in flexure and shear are obtained for various sizes and steel ratios. It is found from the present study that the size effect is also very pronounced for the flexural resistance in reinforced concrete structures. The prediction formulas for the size effect of reinforced concrete beams in flexure and shear are proposed. The proposed equations agree relatively well with experimental data. The present study will provide useful bases for more accurate analysis and design of reinforced concrete structures.

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Size Effect on Shear Strength of Reinforced High Strength Concrete Beams (고강도 철근콘크리트 보의 전단강도에 관한 크기효과)

  • 김진근;박연동
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 1992.10a
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    • pp.155-160
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    • 1992
  • In this study , the size effect on diagonal shear failure of reinforced high strength concrete beams was investigated, For this purpose, ten singly reinforced high strength concrete beams without web reinforcement were tested for five different dimensions of effective depth which were varied from 67mm to 915mm. The compressive strength of concrete used in this study was 53.7 MPa. One type of reinforcing bar with nominal yield strength of 400 MPa was used. Test results were analyzed and compared with strength predicted by ACI code equation, Zutty's equation and Bazant &Kim's equation. As the results, ACI code equation was seriously unconservative for beams with d of 915mm. Bazant & Kim's equation predicted well the trend of test data. Within the scope of this study, there was no clear difference in size effect with variation of compressive strength of concrete.

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The Size Effect of the Shear Strengths of Reinforced Concrete Beams Strengthened with Carbon FRP (CFRP로 전단보강된 철근콘크리트 보의 크기효과)

  • Zi, Goang-Seup;Kim, Ki-Hong;Kim, Jin-Keun
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2005.11a
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    • pp.291-294
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    • 2005
  • Presented are the results of recent tests on diagonal shear failure of reinforced concrete beams which are externally reinforced in the transverse direction by a unidirectional carbon fiber reinforced polymer, instead of the traditional steel stirrups. Three different series of the beams with different shear reinforcements, i.e. U-wrapping with carbon sheet, U-wrapping with carbon strips and full wrapping with carbon strips were tested. Those beams were geometrically similar, and the size range is 1:1.9:4. The failure of the beams are characterized by delamination, crushing of concrete and distributed shear cracks. It is found that the size effect is much weaker than that of the reference beams without CFRP. Therefore CFRP sheet may be used as the transverse reinforcement with a minor size effect. However, it is not clear that the same conclusion can be drawn in other sizes. Further researches are recommended.

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Size effect on strength of Fiber-Reinforced Self-Compacting Concrete (SCC) after exposure to high temperatures

  • Gulsan, M. Eren;Abdulhaleem, Khamees N.;Kurtoglu, Ahmet E.;Cevik, Abdulkadir
    • Computers and Concrete
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    • v.21 no.6
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    • pp.681-695
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    • 2018
  • This pioneer study investigates the size effect on the compressive and tensile strengths of fiber-reinforced self-compacting concrete (FR-SCC) with different specimens, before and after exposure to elevated temperatures. 432 self-compacting concrete (SCC) specimens with two concrete grades (50 and 80MPa) and three steel fiber ratios (0%, 0.5% and 1%) were prepared and tested. Moreover, based on the experimental results, new formulations were proposed to predict the residual strengths for different specimens. A parametric study was also carried out to investigate the accuracy of proposed formulations. Residual strength results showed that the cylinder specimen with dimensions of $100{\times}200mm$ was the most affected, while the cube with a size of 100 mm maintained a constant difference with the standard cylinder ($150{\times}300mm$). Temperature effect on the cube specimen (150 mm) was the least in comparison to other specimen sizes and types. In general, provision of steel fibers in SCC mixtures resulted in a reduction in temperature effect on the variance of a conversion factor. Parametric study results confirm that the proposed numerical models are safe to be used for all types of SCC specimens.

Size-effect Correction for Pavement Concrete Flexural Strength Test (포장 콘크리트 휨인장강도 시험체에 대한 크기효과 보정)

  • Shim, Jae-Won;Kwon, Soon-Min;Yoo, Tae-Seok;Ahn, Tae-Song;Kim, Nag-Young
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2008.11a
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    • pp.625-628
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    • 2008
  • Size-effect correction factors of the flexural test specimens, which had controled cement concrete pavement quality, were investigated and derived to be easily used in field. We couldn't find the size-effects in this size range (10, 12, 15cm) of specimens, which were made of 32mm crushed aggregates, and the theoretical verification was presented by Bazant's equations. Finally, non-dimensional chart for size-effect correction was proposed, covering the relationship between compressive strengths and w/c ratios.

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DURABILITY TESTING OF MARINE REINFORCED CONCRETE UNDER FATIGUE LOADING, PART I AND II (피로하중을 받는 해양 콘크리트의 내구성 연구)

  • ;D. V. Reddy
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 1996.04a
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    • pp.348-353
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    • 1996
  • This study addresses the evaluation of the durability of reinforced concrete marine structures subjected to fatigue loading. The laboratory investigation was carried out on full and half size reinforced concrete specimens with three different water cement ratios (0.3, 0.4, and 0.56), static and fatigue loading conditions, and epoxy-coated and regular black steel reinforcements. The marine tidal zone was simulated by alternate filling and draining of the tank (wet and dry cycled), and a galvanostatic corrosion technique to accelerate corrosion of reinforcement was used. Half-cell potentials and changes of crack width were measured periodically during the exposure and followed by ultimate strength testing. The significant findings include adverse effect of fatigue loading, existence of an explicit size effect, poor performance of epoxy coated steel, and negative effect of increasing water/cement ratio.

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Size Effect for Flexural Compressive Strength of Concrete (콘크리트의 휨 압축강도의 크기효과)

  • Kim, Jin-Keun;Yi, Seong-Tae;Yang, Eun-Ik
    • Magazine of the Korea Concrete Institute
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    • v.11 no.2
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    • pp.157-165
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    • 1999
  • When the ultimate strength of a concrete flexural member is evaluated, the effect of member size is usually not considered. For various types of loading, however, the strength always decreases with the increment of member size. In this paper the size effect of a flexural compression member is investigated by experiments. For this purpose, a series of C-shaped specimens subjected to axial compressive load and bending moment was tested using three different sizes of specimens with a compressive strength of 528 kg/$cm^2$. According to test results the size effect on flexural compressive strength was apparent, and more distinct than that for uniaxial compressive strength of cylinders. Finally a model equation was derived using regression analyses with experimental data.