• Title/Summary/Keyword: Civil structures construction

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Experimental Investigation of Rotation-Up Erection for Keel Truss Spatial Structures (Rotation-Up 공법에 의한 킬 트러스 대공간 구조물의 Erection 실험에 관한 연구)

  • Kim, Cheol-Hwan;Chae, Won-Tak;Baek, Ki-Youl;Jung, Hwan-Mok
    • Journal of Korean Association for Spatial Structures
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    • v.13 no.2
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    • pp.57-66
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    • 2013
  • There are a number of construction methods to build spatial structures such as erection method, Element method, Block method, Sliding method, Lift-up method and Push-up method. These methods are uneconomical and low accuracy, and require long construction duration because of a need of a scaffold or a tower crane to build spatial roof frame. In this study, the construction method to erect a truss structure was proposed as an economical and easy installation method. The proposed method has end hinges of keel truss and winches with horizontal cable. This method makes safe and accurate production and reduces construction duration because trusses are built on the floor or supporter. The goal of this study is to verify the validity of construction method by building scale model using the proposed method.

EFFECT OF CONCRETE STRENGTH ON FLEXURAL DEFLECTION OF HIGH-STRENGTH REINFORCED CONCRETE BEAMS

  • Inju Lee;Taewan Kim;Sung-Nam Hong;Jie Cui;Sun-Kyu Park
    • International conference on construction engineering and project management
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    • 2009.05a
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    • pp.1313-1317
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    • 2009
  • Deflections of Reinforced concrete structures must satisfy the permissible values and it is hard to predict the due to uncertainty of deflection of the reinforced concrete structures. Thus, many researchers have suggested a number of experimental equation of deflection against the uncertainty. In a specification, a procedure to evaluate flexure deflection using effective moment of inertia and moment-curvature relation is suggested. ACI offers a method using effective moment of inertia, which has been developed by Branson. Eurocode 2(EC2) suggests a procedure to evaluate deflection of reinforced concrete structure using moment-curvature relation. In this paper, a series of experiments were conducted on the singly reinforced concrete beams which have the same reinforcement ratio and different concrete strength. Therefore, the effect of the concrete strength on the deflection of the beams was analysed. The deflections obtained from the experiment were compared with the deflections calculated with ACI code and EC2.

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Intelligent design of retaining wall structures under dynamic conditions

  • Yang, Haiqing;Koopialipoor, Mohammadreza;Armaghani, Danial Jahed;Gordan, Behrouz;Khorami, Majid;Tahir, M.M.
    • Steel and Composite Structures
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    • v.31 no.6
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    • pp.629-640
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    • 2019
  • The investigation of retaining wall structures behavior under dynamic loads is considered as one of important parts for designing such structures. Generally, the performance of these structures is under the influence of the environment conditions and their geometry. The aim of this research is to design retaining wall structures based on smart and optimal systems. The use of accuracy and speed to assess the structures under different conditions is one of the important parts sought by designers. Therefore, optimal and smart systems are able to have better addressing these problems. Using numerical and coding methods, this research investigates the retaining wall structure design under different dynamic conditions. More than 9500 models were constructed and considered for modelling design. These designs include height and thickness of the wall, soil density, rock density, soil friction angle, and peak ground acceleration (PGA) variables. Accordingly, a neural network system was developed to establish an appropriate relationship between data to obtain safety factor (SF) of retaining walls under different seismic conditions. Different parameters were analyzed and the effect of each parameter was assessed separately. According to these analyses, the structure optimization was performed to increase the SF values. The optimal and smart design showed that under different PGA conditions, the structure performance can be appropriately improved while utilization of the initial (or basic) parameters leads to the structure failure. Therefore, by increasing accuracy and speed, smart methods could improve the retaining structure performance in controlling the wall failure. The intelligent design process of this study can be applied to some other civil engineering applications such as slope stability.

Development of BIM Library for Civil Structures based on Standardized Drawings-Focused on 2D Standard Drawings of The MOLIT (표준도 기반의 토목구조물 BIM 라이브러리 개발 -국토교통부 표준도를 대상으로)

  • Moon, HyounSeok;Ju, KiBum
    • Korean Journal of Computational Design and Engineering
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    • v.19 no.1
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    • pp.80-90
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    • 2014
  • In architecture projects, BIM library has widely been using for prefabrication of products and design process. However, since the shape of structures is different by each project in civil engineering projects and a shape representation system is complicated, it is not easy to develop a standardized BIM library. To solve these issues, this study develops BIM library based on standardized 2D shop drawings for civil structures. The standardized shop drawings, which are the targets of the BIM library model, should be first selected. Besides, in order to define modeling scope with the level of general and shop drawings for each structure, LOD(Level of Detail) and breakdown structure are determined, and development methods of families of 3D object type including 2D profile and rebar through commercial software are established. With these, properties of BIM library are configured, and a utilization model of the BIM libraries is constructed for 3D modeling and a simulation using the BIM library. Therefore, this study can identify properties that are necessary when IFC schema is configured for civil engineering projects. For future, it is expected that easiness of BIM design for the civil engineering projects and generation, management, and analysis system of BIM library for road projects will be secured.

Case Study for Improvement of Marine Clay and Dredgedfill Ground by CGS Method (CGS공법에 의한 해성점토 및 준설매립지반의 기초보강 사례)

  • Shin, Eun-Chul;Chung, Duek-Kyo;Seo, Kui-Chang;Lee, Myung-Shin
    • Proceedings of the Korean Geotechical Society Conference
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    • 2010.03a
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    • pp.480-488
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    • 2010
  • The CGS method is non-discharge replacement method improving ground stiffness by the effect of static compaction with injecting very low slump mortar into ground, and is applied for increasing bearing capacity and filling ground cavity by lifting or restoring differential settled structures and preventing differential settlement. This paper suggests design of ground improvement and construction case history for civil engineering structures by CGS method. This method can be used for reinforcing soft ground and liquefaction of loose sandy soil. This method was used in SongDo area in Incheon Economic Free Zone due to its low vibration of ground while it can improve the soft soil where underground structures(subway and box culvert) are already existed.

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Inverse analysis of erection process for prismatic tensegrity structures with redundant cables

  • Pei Zhang;Huiting Xiong;Jingjing Yang;Jiayan Liu
    • Steel and Composite Structures
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    • v.49 no.2
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    • pp.125-141
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    • 2023
  • Firstly, a new kind of prismatic tensegrity structures with redundant cables is defined, the topology, geometry and forming conditions of which are introduced further. The development of its mechanical properties including self-stress states and structural stiffness with the increment of the twist angle is also investigated carefully. Combined with the topology of this kind of structures, a reasonable erection scheme is proposed, in which some temporary lifting points need to be set and two groups of vertical cables are tensioned in batches. Then, a simplified dynamic relaxation method is employed to track the erection process inversely, which aims to predict each intermediate equilibrium state during the construction, and give the key structural parameters that can effectively guide the construction. The removal of the active cables, the relaxation or tension of the passive cables are simulated by controlling their axial stiffness, so that the structural composition as well as the serial numbers of the elements always keep invariant regardless of the withdrawal of the slack cables. The whole analysis process is clear in concept, simple to implement and easy to popularize. Finally, several examples are given to verify the practicability and effectiveness of the proposed method further.

Damage detection of a thin plate using pseudo local flexibility method

  • Hsu, Ting Yu;Liu, Chao Lun
    • Earthquakes and Structures
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    • v.15 no.5
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    • pp.463-471
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    • 2018
  • The virtual forces of the original local flexibility method are restricted to inducing stress on the local parts of a structure. To circumvent this restriction, we developed a pseudo local flexibility (PLFM) method that can successfully detect damage to hyperstatic beam structures using fewer modes. For this study, we further developed the PLFM so that it could detect damage in plate structures. We also devised the theoretical background for the PLFM with non-local virtual forces for plate structures, and both the lateral and rotary degree of freedom (DOF) measurements were considered separately. This study investigates the effects of the number of modes, the actual location that sustained damage, multiple damage locations, and noise in modal parameters for the damage detection results obtained from damaged numerical plates. The results revealed that the PLFM can be used for damage detection, localization, and quantification for plate structures, regardless of the use of the lateral DOF and/or rotary DOF.

Modelling and integrity assessment of shear connectors in precast cast-in-situ concrete bridges

  • Moyo, Pilate;Sibanda, Bongani;Beushausen, Hans
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.42 no.1
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    • pp.55-72
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    • 2012
  • Precast-cast insitu concrete bridge construction is widely practiced for small to medium span structures. These bridges consist of precast pre-stressed concrete beams of various cross-sections with a cast in-situ reinforced concrete slab. The connection between the beams and the slab is via shear links often included during the manufacturing process of the beams. This form of construction is attractive as it provides for standardisation, reduced formwork and construction time. The assessment of the integrity of shear connectors in existing bridges is a major challenge. A procedure for assessment of shear connectors based on vibration testing and finite element model updating is proposed. The technique is applied successfully to a scaled model bridge model and an existing bridge structure.

Dynamic deformation measurement in structural inspections by Augmented Reality technology

  • Jiaqi, Xu;Elijah, Wyckoff;John-Wesley, Hanson;Derek, Doyle;Fernando, Moreu
    • Smart Structures and Systems
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    • v.30 no.6
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    • pp.649-659
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    • 2022
  • Structural Health Monitoring (SHM) researchers have identified Augmented Reality (AR) as a new technology that can assist inspections. Post-seismic structural inspections are conducted to evaluate the safety level of the damaged structures. Quantification of nearby structural changes over short-term and long-term periods can provide building inspectors with information to improve their safety. This paper proposes a Time Machine Measure (TMM) application based on an Augmented Reality (AR) Head-Mounted-Device (HMD) platform. The primary function of TMM is to restore the saved meshes of a past environment and overlay them onto the real environment so that inspectors can intuitively measure dynamic structural deformation and other environmental movements. The proposed TMM application was verified by demo experiments simulating a real inspection environment.

Response Analysis of Frame Structures with the Consideration of Tunnel Construction (프레임구조물의 터널시공에 따른 거동분석)

  • Son, Moorak;Park, Jaehyun
    • KSCE Journal of Civil and Environmental Engineering Research
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    • v.32 no.3C
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    • pp.121-127
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    • 2012
  • This paper investigates the response of frame structures with the consideration of tunnel construction (ground loss) conditions. The response of four-story open frame structure and block-infilled frame structures, which are subjected to tunnelling-induced ground movements, has been investigated in different construction (ground loss) conditions using numerical analysis. The open frame structure has been modelled as an elastic structure, while the block-infilled frame structure has been modelled to have real cracks when the shear and tensile stress exceed the maximum shear and tensile strength. The response of the two different frame structures has been investigated in terms of construction (ground loss) conditions considering the magnitude of deformations and cracks in structures. In addition, the damage levels, which are possibly induced in the structures, has been provided in terms of construction (ground loss) conditions using the state of strain damage estimation criterion (Son and Cording, 2005). The results of this study will provide a background for better understandings for controlling and minimizing building damage on nearby frame structures due to tunnelling-induced ground movements.