dc.description.abstract |
Experimental investigations are conducted to study the increase in axial capacities of
short concrete columns due to confinement with fiber reinforced polymer (FRP) wraps.
Experimental evidences gathered in this work and supported also by a few past studies
suggest that concrete made from aggregates with lower unit weight and higher porosity
offer lower modulus of elasticity. However columns made of such concrete must have
larger dilational property under load. This fundamental perception motivated the current
research to evaluate the attainable axial capacity enhancement in concrete columns made
of different aggregates available in Bangladesh. In this context, confined and unconfined
concrete column specimens made using stone, brick, recycled stone and recycled brick
aggregates were tested under uniaxial compression. Carbon-FRP and glass-FRP bonded
to the surface of concrete with epoxy offered different confining effect on the specimens.
To measure the dilation effect, simultaneous measurements are taken by using a digital
data acquisition system and image analysis technique. The vertical load and displacement
histories obtained from the load cell of a computer controlled universal testing machine is
synthesized with the strain measurement results gathered from analyzing of high
definition still images. High speed (60 frames per second) video camera was used to
capture digital images. In this process, lateral strains and Poisson’s effects are measured
and the confinement due to dilation of concrete for different aggregate types are
evaluated and compared. To assess the Poisson’s ratio in concrete with different
aggregates, numerical trials on nonlinear finite element solid model of columns are
conducted. In the numerical trials, the experimental measurements on load-vertical strain
and load-horizontal strain are matched with the numerical results.
It is seen that upon loading, the confinement effect in concrete is mobilized due to the
dilation property. Concrete under load begins to dilate and hence gets cracked. The
dilation effect in brick aggregate concrete was found distinctly larger than the stone
aggregate concrete. The Poisson’s ratio of stone aggregate concrete was also found
convincingly lower than brick aggregate concrete, recycled brick aggregate concrete and
recycled stone aggregate concrete by FE analysis. The values of Poisson’s ratio of the
concretes were estimated at 0.25, 0.35, 0.37 and 0.40, respectively. This direct
observation suggests that the confinement effect due to dilation of brick and recycled aggregate concretes are higher than stone aggregate concretes. The modulus of elasticity
of stone aggregate concrete was also measured higher than brick and other recycled
aggregate concretes with a lower confined compressive strain. Based on the
measurements, a set of linear relations between confined compressive strength to
unconfined compressive strength and confined compressive strain to unconfined
compressive strain of concrete columns are suggested for each of the aggregate types.
The stress-strain model considering the Poisson’s ratio and modulus of elasticity is
proposed for stone, brick, recycled stone and recycled brick aggregate concrete. The
values of strain enhancement coefficient and confinement effectiveness coefficient were
found to be larger for stone aggregate concrete. The P-M interaction diagrams are
constructed to illustrate the enhancement in consequential bending moment capacity of
column due to larger peak confined compressive strains. The enhancement in moment
capacity due to FRP confinement of stone aggregate concrete column was distinctly
found to be lower than brick and recycled aggregate concrete columns. Furthermore,
experimental, analytical and numerical procedure developed in this work is applicable for
constructing rational P-M interaction diagrams for confined short concrete columns, in
general. P-M interaction diagrams drawn using the suggested procedure can be applied
for the design of confined columns for both axial load and bending moment that fall
above the line connecting the origin and balanced point of P-M interaction curve. |
en_US |