International Concrete Abstracts Portal

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: 

SP149-23

Date: 

October 1, 1994

Author(s):

F. K. Kong, S. Teng, P. p. Maimba, K. H. Tan, and L. W. Guan

Publication:

Symposium Papers

Volume:

149

Abstract:

The current design recommendations for concrete deep beams given in the ACI Code, Canadian Code, CEB-FIP Model Code, CIRIA Guide-2, etc., are based on research results on normal strength concrete. As such, these design recommendations may not be directly applicable to deep beams made of high-strength concrete. A summary of the authors' recent research on the shear behavior of deep beams made of high-strength concrete is presented. Experimental results on the ultimate shear strengths of single-span, continuous, and slender deep beams as affected by the strength of concrete, shear-span-to-depth ratio, and slenderness ratio, are compared to various design methods. It is found that the ACI method is overly conservative for all cases, the Canadian Code method is unconservative for higher strength concrete, the CEB-FIP method gives somewhat scattered predictions, and the CIRIA Guide-2 is slightly unconservative for all cases. A minor modification on the CIRIA Guide-2 method is shown to yield a reliable method for all the cases investigated.

DOI:

10.14359/4208


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


Document: 

SP149-11

Date: 

October 1, 1994

Author(s):

D. Galeota, M. M. Giammetteo, and R. Marino

Publication:

Symposium Papers

Volume:

149

Abstract:

Results of an experimental study on the structural behavior of exterior beam-column joints made of high-strength concrete and subjected to large reversal loads are presented. Variables examined were the joint shear stress and the ratio of transverse reinforcement. Based on the experimental results, it was shown that properly designed and detailed high-strength reinforced beam-column joints display ductile hysteretic behavior.

DOI:

10.14359/4159


Document: 

SP149-12

Date: 

October 1, 1994

Author(s):

H. Manalip, M. Pinglot, and M. Lorrain

Publication:

Symposium Papers

Volume:

149

Abstract:

Although high-strength concrete (HSC) has a brittle behavior in the case of specimens subjected to axial compression, a quite different behavior is obtained in the case of reinforced or prestressed concrete members subjected to bending. In this paper, five tests of HSC beams subjected to pure bending are described and analyzed to quantify their ductility and to deduce the real strain-softening behavior of their compressed zones. Three cases are studied: reinforced concrete, prestressed concrete, and partially prestressed concrete. The comparison of the experimental ultimate deformations (such as plastic rotations, curvatures, deflections) with the calculated values show that the strain-softening of compressed concrete may occur after the peak stress and can be defined by a k' coefficient varying from 0 to 1. For the tested beams, it was found that the use of HSC instead of normal strength concrete (NSC) results in the doubling of the plastic rotation capacity, for reinforced or prestressed beams subjected to pure bending.

DOI:

10.14359/4162


Document: 

SP149-13

Date: 

October 1, 1994

Author(s):

M. Imama Vamdewalle, and F. Mortelmans

Publication:

Symposium Papers

Volume:

149

Abstract:

Sixteen very high strength concrete beams (3600 x 350 x 200 mm) with and without steel fibers were tested under different combinations of shear force and bending moment. The beams were singly reinforced and without shear (web) reinforcement. The cylinder compressive strength of concrete was about 110 MPa. The main variables in this program were: shear span/depth ratio (a/d), the steel fiber content (V f), and the percentage of the longitudinal flexural reinforcement ({rho}). The test results showed that, adding steel fibers to high-strength concrete increased the ultimate shear strength, increased the stiffness, reduced the deflection, and transformed the failure mode into a more ductile one. Based on the test results, two empirical expressions have been proposed to predict the shear strength of steel fiber high-strength concrete.

DOI:

10.14359/4164


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