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Home > Publications > International Concrete Abstracts Portal
The International Concrete Abstracts Portal is an ACI led collaboration with leading technical organizations from within the international concrete industry and offers the most comprehensive collection of published concrete abstracts.
Showing 1-5 of 46 Abstracts search results
Document:
SP149
Date:
October 1, 1994
Author(s):
Editor: V.M. Malhotra
Publication:
Symposium Papers
Volume:
149
Abstract:
SP-149 The theme of this second ACI International Conference was high-performance concrete. The conference proceedings title "High-Performance Concrete" contains 45 papers presented at this program. Whether you are currently involved with or are considering the use of high-performance concrete, this special symposium document is a must for you. Use the valuable information found in the above titles as well as the other listed in this special document.
DOI:
10.14359/14189
SP149-22
H. Tanaka, Y. Sato, R. Park, and N. Kani
In recent years, moment-resisting frames built using high-strength concrete have been used for high-rise buildings, primarily for economic reasons. When such high-rise buildings are subjected to severe earthquakes, cyclic horizontal and axial loading can be imposed on the exterior columns. The ductile behavior of such columns needs to be insured. In this study, improvement of the flexural ductility of high-strength concrete columns under high axial compressive load is attempted by arranging longitudinal bars with mixed steel grades. The basic concept of this method is to achieve the gradual attainment of yield of longitudinal bars, from low- to high-strength steel, as the column deflection increases, and thus to delay the column reaching the maximum moment capacity until the column deflection attains the required level. To verify the adequacy of the preceding design concept, six cantilever columns with 400-mm-square cross section have been constructed and tested under simulated severe seismic lateral loading with axial compressive load of either 0.3 f' c or 0.6 f' cA g. The compressive strength of concrete f' c was 65.7 MPa on average, and steels with yield strengths of 442 and 1033 MPa were used for longitudinal reinforcing bars. The adequacy of the preceding design concept was verified from the test results, and it was found that the New Zealand concrete design code could provide a good guideline for its application to design.
10.14359/4169
SP149-24
Q. Wang, G. Zhoo, and L. Lin
Ductility of high-strength concrete columns is very important in the aseismic design. There are many factors affecting the ductility of compression-bending members. The axial load ratio and volume stirrups ratio are main factors. Based on the experimental research of reinforced concrete columns with high-strength and normal strength concretes under monotonic and cyclic loading, it can be observed that under different axial load ratio and stirrup volume ratio the damage pattern of members is different, and there is also obvious difference in the ductility. To control ductility of members, we must control the damage pattern. If the axial load ratio is high, the shear-compressive damage of the column should be avoided to provide the required ductility. On the basis of experiments, the mechanism of the effect of axial load ratio on the ductility of column is also discussed. The axial load ratio limits are proposed under the condition of limited ductility. The experiments show that the relationship between stirrup ratio and axial load ratio is not linear if the axial load ratio is high, which is different from previous research. In the design, a simplified bilinear relationship can be adopted that agrees well with the experimental results.
10.14359/4171
SP149-29
F. A. Al-Jahdali, F. F. Wafa, and S. A. Shihata
Experimental results on the bond behavior of high-strength concrete are presented. A total of 36 specimens was tested. The variables were the concrete compressive strength, the bar diameter, and the embedded length. The concrete compressive strength varied from 42 to 78 MPa (6000 to 11,000 psi). The bar diameters were 14, 16, 18, and 20 mm. The bond tests were conducted using a modified version of the Danish Standard DS 2082 pullout test in which the concrete surrounding the bar was in uniform tension. The test results indicate that the average bond stress at failure increases with the increase in the concrete compressive strength and decreases with the increase in the embedded length. The embedded length calculated using the ACI Building Code 318-89 equation caused a steel yielding failure. The predominant type of failure was the splitting of concrete; however, yielding of the embedded steel preceded the splitting failure in more than half of the specimens. It was observed that the ACI Building Code equation underestimates average bond stress for high-strength concrete. A model is developed to predict the bond strength of high-strength concrete in terms of the concrete cover, bar diameter, embedded length, and concrete compressive strength as variables. The proposed equation gave good prediction to the bond stress at failure of the pullout specimens tested in this investigation. 260-594
10.14359/4173
SP149-34
N. J. Carino
A full factorial experimental design was used to investigate the effects of the following variables on cylinder strength: end preparation (sulfur capping versus grinding), cylinder size (100 versus 150 mm diameter), type of testing machine (1.33-MN capacity versus 4.45-MN capacity), and nominal stress rate (0.14 versus 0.34 MPa/sec). Two levels of strength were used (45 and 90 Mpa), and three replicates were tested for each run. Specific gravities were measured to check on the consistency of cylinder fabrication. Statistical analyses indicated that all the factors had significant effects on the measured compressive strength. On average, the 100-mm cylinders resulted in about 1.3 percent greater strength, the faster stress rate produced about 2.6 percent greater strength, the ground cylinders were 2.1 percent stronger, and the 1.33-MN testing machine resulted in about 2.3 percent greater strength. There were significant interactions among the factors, so that the effects were greater than the average values for particular factor settings. For example, the effect of end preparation depended on the strength level. For the 45-Mpa concrete, there was no strength difference due to the method of end preparation, but for the 90-MPa concrete, grinding resulted in as much as 6 percent greater strength in certain cases. Analysis of dispersion indicated that the 100-mm cylinders had higher within-test variability, but the differences were not statistically significant. Recommendations for modifications to testing standards are provided.
10.14359/4176
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