• Title/Summary/Keyword: Deformed Reinforcing bar

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An Experimental Study on the Bond Characteristics of Glass Fiber Reinforced Polymer Rebar (GFRP Rebar의 부착성능에 관한 실험적 연구)

  • Park Ji-Sun;You Young-Chan;Park Young-Hwan;Choi Ki-Sun;Kim Hyeong-Yeol;Kim Keung-Hwan
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2004.05a
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    • pp.124-127
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    • 2004
  • This study is to investigate the bond characteristics of glass fiber reinforced polymer(GFRP) reinforcing bars in concrete by pullout test experimentally. Three different types of GFRP bars with different surface deformations were considered in this study. Also, standard deformed steel reinforcing bar with or without epoxy-coating were included for the comparisons of bond strength. All test procedures including specimens preparation, test apparatus and measuring devices were made according to the recommendation of CSA(Canadian Standards Association) Standard S806-02. From the test results, it was found that small surface indentations contributed to increase the bond strength of GFRP bar significantly. Based on the limited test results till now, the bond strength of GFRP bar with sand-coated deformation commercially available in foreign market is around $80\%$ of that of steel deformed bars.

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A Study on the Mechanical Properties of Gas Pressure Welded Splices of Deformed Reinforcing Bar (가스압접 이형철근의 기계적 강도 특성 연구)

  • Jeon, Juntai
    • Journal of the Society of Disaster Information
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    • v.11 no.4
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    • pp.520-526
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    • 2015
  • Reinforcing bar splices are inevitable in reinforced concrete structure. In these days, there are three main types of splices used in reinforced concrete construction site - lapped splice, mechanical splice and welded splice. Low cost, practicality in construction site, less time consuming and high performance make gas pressure welding become a favorable splice method. However, reinforcing bar splice experiences thermal loading history during the welding procedure. This may lead to the presence of residual stress in the vicinity of the splice which affects the fatigue life of the reinforcing bar. Therefore, residual stress analysis and tensile test of the gas pressure welded splice are carried out in order to verify the load bearing capacity of the gas pressure welded splice. The reinforcing bar used in this work is SD400, which is manufactured in accordance with KS D 3504. The results show that the residual stresses in welded splice is relatively small, thus not affecting the performance of the reinforcing bar. Moreover, the strength of the gas pressure welded splice is high enough for the development of yielding in the bar. As such, the reinforcing bar with gas pressure welded splice has enough capacity to behave as continuous bar.

Lap Splice Length of Glass Fiber Reinforced Polymer (GFRP) Reinforcing Bar (GFRP 보강근의 이음성능)

  • Lee Chang-Ho;Choi Dong-Uk;Song Ki-Mo;Park Young-Hwan;You Young-Chan
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2004.05a
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    • pp.120-123
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    • 2004
  • The lap splice lengths of deformed steel reinforcing bars and GFRP bars were experimentally compared using beam specimens. The purpose was to evaluate the length required of the GFRP bar to develop strength at least equivalent to the conventional steel reinforcing bar. The main test variable was the lap splice length: 10, 20, 30 $d_b$ for the deformed steel bars and 20, 30, 40 $d_b$ for the GFRP bars. Two different types of GFRP bars were tested: (1) one with spiral-type deformation and (2) plain round bars. Elastic modulus was about 1/5 of the steel bars while the tensile strength was about 690 MPa for the GFRP bars. Nominal diameter of the GFRP bars and steel bars was 12.7 and 13 mm, respectively. Normal strength concrete (28-day $f_{cu}$ = 30 MPa) was used. For the conventional steel bars (SD400 grade), strength over 400 MPa in tension was developed using the lap splice length of 20 and 30 $f_{cu}$. Only $87\%$ of the nominal yield strength was reached with the lap splice length of 10 $d_b$. For the spiral-type deformed GFRP bars with $40-d_b$ lap splice length, 440 MPa in tension was determined. The maximum tensile strength developed of the GFRP bars with smaller lap splice lengths decreased. The plain GFRP bar was not effective in developing the tensile strength even with $40-d_b$ lap splice length. Development of the cracks on beam surface was clearly visible for the beams reinforced with the GFRP bars. Mid-span deflections, however, were significantly smaller than the comparable beams with conventional steel bars indicating potential ductility problem.

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Bond strength of reinforcement in splices in beams

  • Turk, Kazim;Yildirim, M. Sukru
    • Structural Engineering and Mechanics
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    • v.16 no.4
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    • pp.469-478
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    • 2003
  • The primary aim of this study was to investigate the bond strength between reinforcement and concrete. Large sized nine beams, which were produced from concrete with approximately ${f_c}^{\prime}=30$ MPa, were tested. Each beam was designed to include two bars in tension, spliced at the center of the span. The splice length was selected so that bars would fail in bond, splitting the concrete cover in the splice region, before reaching the yield point. In all experiments, the variable used was the reinforcing bar diameter. In the experiments, beam specimens were loaded in positive bending with the splice in a constant moment region. In consequence, as the bar diameter increased, bond strength and ductility reduced but, however, the stiffnesses of the beams (resistance to deflection) increased. Morever, a empirical equation was obtained to calculate the bond strength of reinforcement and this equation was compared with Orangun et al. (1977) and Esfahani and Rangan (1998). There was a good agreement between the values computed from the predictive equation and those computed from equations of Orangun et al. (1977) and Esfahani and Rangan (1998).

Study on the Development Design Criteria of High Relative Rib Area bars (높은 마디면적비 철근의 부착강도에 따른 정착설계 연구)

  • Park, Sung-Gyu;Hong, Geon-Ho;Choi, Oan-Chul;Hong, Gi-Suop
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2006.05a
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    • pp.270-273
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    • 2006
  • Bond between reinforcing bar and the surrounding concrete is made up of three components. There are chemical adesion, friction, and mechanical interaction between the rib of the bar and the surrounding concrete. bond of deformed bars depends primarily on the beraing of rib deformation anainst the surrounding concrete. The final objective of the study is to enhance structural stability, and workability thorough increasing the bond strength between deformed bar and surrounding concrete. The results of this study will be used to shorten bond and development length by $20{\sim}30$ percent and it will facilitate to use of high strength and high-relative rib area bars.

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Towards an Improved Understanding of Bond Behaviors

  • Choi, Oan Chul
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2003.11a
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    • pp.239-243
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    • 2003
  • A reducing bearing angle theory for bond of ribbed reinforcing bars to concrete is proposed to simulate experimental observation. Analytical expressions to determine bond strength for splitting and pullout failure are derived, where the bearing angle is a key variable. As bearing angle is reduced, splitting strength decreases and shearing strength increases. The proposed reducing bearing angle theory is effective to simulate damage of the deformed bar-concrete interface and understand bond mechanism of ribbed reinforcing steel in concrete structures.

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Local bond stress-slip behavior of reinforcing bars embedded in lightweight aggregate concrete

  • Tang, Chao-Wei
    • Computers and Concrete
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    • v.16 no.3
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    • pp.449-466
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    • 2015
  • This paper aims to study the local bond stress-slip behavior of reinforcing bars embedded in lightweight aggregate concrete (LWAC). The experimental variables of the local bond stress-slip tests include concrete strength (20, 40 and 60 MPa), deformed steel bar size (#4, #6 and #8) and coarse aggregate (normal weight aggregate, reservoir sludge lightweight aggregate and waterworks sludge lightweight aggregate). The test results show that the ultimate bond strength increased with the increase of concrete compressive strength. Moreover, the larger the rib height to the diameter ratio ($h/d_b$) of the deformed steel bars is, the greater the ultimate bond stress is. In addition, the suggestion value of the CEB-FIP Model Code to the LWAC specimen's ultimate bond stress is more conservative than that of the normal weight concrete.

Lap Splice Length of Glass Fiber Reinforced Polymer (GFRP) Reinforcing Bars with Different Surface Design (외피형태에 따른 GFRP 보강근의 겹침 이음길이)

  • Choi Dong-Uk;Lee Chang-Ho;Ha Sang-Soo;Park Young-Hwan;You Young-Chan
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2004.11a
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    • pp.449-452
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    • 2004
  • The lap splice lengths of deformed steel reinforcing bars and GFRP bars with two different to surface type were experimentally compared using beam specimens. The purpose was to evaluate the length required of the GFRP bar to develop strength equivalent to the conventional steel reinforcing bar. The main test variable was the lap splice length. Two different GFRP bar surfaces were tested: (1) spiral-type GFRP bars and (2) sand coated GFRP bars. For the conventional steel bars (SD400 grade), strength over 400 MPa in tension was reached using the lap splice length of $30d_b$. Splice failure was observed in the specimen with the lap splice length of $20d_b$. For the spiral-type and sand coated GFRP bars, the tensile strength developed in the GFRP bars decreased with decreasing splice lengths. Development of the cracks on beam surfaces was clearly visible for the beams reinforced with the GFRP bars. Mid-span deflections, however, were significantly smaller than the comparable beams with conventional steel bars indicating potential ductility problem.

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An Experimental Study on Development Length of Untensioned Prestressing Strand (인장을 가하지 않은 PS강연선의 정착길이에 대한 실험적 연구)

  • Choi, Jun-Young;Ha, Sang-Su;Kim, Seung-Hun;Choi, Chang-Sik;Lee, Li-Hyung
    • Proceedings of the Korea Concrete Institute Conference
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    • 2005.05a
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    • pp.331-334
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    • 2005
  • The nature of bond of untensioned prestressed strand in concrete differs from that of plain or deformed reinforcing bar as well as tensioned prestressed strand. There is a very limited amount of published research information regarding bonding of this type reinforcing. In order to use and design untensioned strand as reinforcing, relationships defining the load transfer characteristics of the strand are necessary. A program based upon pullout tests was designed to develop data relating the critical parameters for determining load transfer behavior of the untensioned strand. The purpose of this study is to investigate the characteristics of bond and development length between untensioned strand and concrete. The test variables include diameter of strands (9.3mm, 12.7mm) and development lengths. The maximum bond stress at the 9.3mm and 12.7mm strands decreases with the increase of the rate of development length. The untensioned prestressed strands displayed bond performance when secure development length more than 80$\%$ according to the development of deformed bars equation.

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A new base plate system using deformed reinforcing bars for concrete filled tubular column

  • Park, Yong-Myung;Hwang, Won-Sup;Yoon, Tae-Yang;Hwang, Min-Oh
    • Steel and Composite Structures
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    • v.5 no.5
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    • pp.375-394
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    • 2005
  • An experimental study was conducted to develop a new base plate anchorage system for concrete filled tubular column under an axial load and a moment. The column was connected to a concrete foundation using ordinary deformed reinforcing bars that are installed at the inside and outside of the column. In order to investigate the moment resisting capacity of the system, horizontal cyclic loads are applied until the ultimate condition is reached with the axial load held constant. To derive a design method for moment resisting capacity, the reinforced concrete section approach was investigated with the assumption of strain compatibility. The results by this approach agreeded well with those of experiments when the bearing pressure of confined concrete and tangent modulus of steel bars are assumed appropriately. Also, it was found that the column interaction curve can be used to predict the yield strength of the base plate system.