• Title/Summary/Keyword: Stress increment

Search Result 316, Processing Time 0.02 seconds

An experimental study on shear mechanical properties of clay-concrete interface with different roughness of contact surface

  • Yang, Wendong;Wang, Ling;Guo, Jingjing;Chen, Xuguang
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
    • /
    • v.23 no.1
    • /
    • pp.39-50
    • /
    • 2020
  • In order to understand the shear mechanical properties of the interface between clay and structure and better serve the practical engineering projects, it is critical to conduct shear tests on the clay-structure interface. In this work, the direct shear test of clay-concrete slab with different joint roughness coefficient (JRC) of the interface and different normal stress is performed in the laboratory. Our experimental results show that (1) shear strength of the interface between clay and structure is greatly affected by the change of normal stress under the same condition of JRC and shear stress of the interface gradually increases with increasing normal stress; (2) there is a critical value JRCcr in the roughness coefficient of the interface; (3) the relationship between shear strength and normal stress can be described by the Mohr Coulomb failure criterion, and the cohesion and friction angle of the interface under different roughness conditions can be calculated accordingly. We find that there also exists a critical value JRCcr for cohesion and the cohesion of the interface increases first and then decreases as JRC increases. Moreover, the friction angle of the interface fluctuates with the change of JRC and it is always smaller than the internal friction angle of clay used in this experiment; (4) the failure type of the interface of the clay-concrete slab is type I sliding failure and does not change with varying JRC when the normal stress is small enough. When the normal stress increases to a certain extent, the failure type of the interface will gradually change from shear failure to type II sliding failure with the increment of JRC.

Grain Evolution during Bulge Blow forming of AZ31 Alloy (AZ31 합금의 온간 부풀림 성형시 결정립 변화에 관한 연구)

  • Baek, S.G.;Lee, Y.S.;Lee, J.H.;Kown, Y.N.
    • Proceedings of the Korean Society for Technology of Plasticity Conference
    • /
    • 2008.10a
    • /
    • pp.452-455
    • /
    • 2008
  • In the present study, blow forming characteristics of commercially roiled AZ31 alloy sheets were investigated. Two different kinds of AZ31 sheets were originally fabricated by using direct casting and strip casting methods respectively. Both sheets have similar grain sizes of about $7{\mu}m$ with a relatively equiaxed structure after rolling. A series of tensile tests were carried out to get flow behavior in terms of temperature and strain rate. Also, grain size effect was investigated by annealing as-received sheet at elevated temperatures. Elongation increased with temperature increment as well expected. However, the differences in tensile test condition did not give much difference in elongation even at the temperature range where a large elongation would be expected with such as fine grain of $7{\mu}m$. Blow forming experiments showed that forming condition did not result in higher difference in dome height. However, the interesting feature from this study was that formability of this AZ31 alloy got different with stress condition. Firstly, biaxial stress condition might result in lower temperature and strain rate dependencies compared to uniaxial tension results for both DC and SC sheets. Secondly, DC showed slower grain growth in uniaxial tension than in biaxial stress state while SC has much higher grain growth rage in uniaxial tension than in bulging.

  • PDF

The study on cell Vth distibution induced by heavily doped channel ionn and Si-SiN stress in flash memory cell (과도한 채널 이온 주입 농도 및 Si-SiN 스트레스가 플래쉬 메모리셀 산포에 미치는 영향)

  • Lee Chi-Kyoung;Park Jung-Ho;Kim Han-Su;Park Kyu-Charn
    • Proceedings of the IEEK Conference
    • /
    • 2004.06b
    • /
    • pp.485-488
    • /
    • 2004
  • As scaling down the cell channel length, the increment of B concentration in channel region is inevitable to overcome the punch-through, especially in flash memory cell with 90nm technology. This paper shows that the high dose ion implantation in channel cause the Si defect. which has been proved to be the major cause of the tailed Vth in distribution. And also mechanical stress due to SiN-anneal process can induce the Si dislocation. and get worse it. With decreasing the channel implantation dose, skipping the anneal and reducing the mechanical stress, Si defect problem is solved completely. We are verify first that the optimization of B concentration in channel must be certainly considered in order to improve Si defect. It is also certainly necessary to stabilize the distribution of cell Vth in the next generation of flash memory.

  • PDF

Strength Characteristics of Anlsotropic Overconsalidated Clay (이방성과압밀점토의 강도특성)

  • 홍원표
    • Geotechnical Engineering
    • /
    • v.4 no.3
    • /
    • pp.35-42
    • /
    • 1988
  • A series of consolidated-undrained cubical triaxial tests was performed to investigate the three- dimensional strength characteristics of anisotropic overconsolidated clay. All specimens sampled in field were loaded under conditions of principal stress directions fixed and aligned with the directions during sampling. A sufficient number of tests It was performed to deter.mine the three- dimensional failure surface in the octahedral plane. The adjusted effective friction angles obtained by the stress state projected on the same octahedral plane did not show anisotropy, while the measured effective friction angles showed considerally difference according to the axes of speccimens. Therefore, Lade failure criterion proposed fort isotropic materials could be also used practically for anisotropic overconsolidated clay. The direction of the plastic strain increment wrectors superimposed on the principal stress space was nearly perpendicular to the traces of the failure surface in the octahedral plane.

  • PDF

An Experiment of Flexural Behavior for the Prestressed Concrete Beams with Partially Bonded External Tendons (외부 부분 부착 PSC 보의 휨거동 실험)

  • Yoo, Sung-Won;Lee, Sang-Jun
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Safety
    • /
    • v.27 no.5
    • /
    • pp.141-147
    • /
    • 2012
  • Recently, the external prestressed concrete structures are increasingly being built. The mechanical behavior of prestressed concrete beams with external tendon is different from that of normal bonded PSC beams in that the increment of tendon stress was derived by whole member behavior. By this reason, the ultimate stress of external tendon is smaller than that of bonded tendon or internal unbonded tendon. The purposes of the present paper are therefore to improve the mechanical behavior of external unbonded tendon by using partially bonded external tendon and to evaluate the flexural behavior of partially bonded external tendon by the flexural member experiment. From the experimental results, before flexural cracking, there was no difference between external unbonded, partially bonded and bonded tendons. However, after cracking, yielding load of reinforcement, ultimate load, and tendon stress were increased in the sequence of external unbonded, partially bonded and bonded tendon members. The equation of ACI-318 and AASHTO 1994 were not matched with test results and had no correlations. So the newly proposed equation will be needed including the consideration of tendon profile, tendon bonded type, and so on. The proposed partially bonded external tendon in this paper will be a effective basis for the evaluation of external tendons in construction and design.

Postbuckling Compressive Strengths of Composite Laminated Cylindrical Panels (복합적층 원통판넬의 좌굴후 압축강도)

  • 권진희;홍창선
    • Transactions of the Korean Society of Mechanical Engineers
    • /
    • v.18 no.4
    • /
    • pp.958-966
    • /
    • 1994
  • The postbuckling compressive strengths of $[0/90/\pm\theta]_s$ composite laminated cylindrical panels with various fiber angles and width-to-length ratios are characterized by the nonlinear finite element method. For the iteration and load-increment along the postbuckling equilibrium path a modified arc-length method in which the effect of failure can be considered is introduced. In the progressive failure analysis the maximum stress criterion and complete unloading model are used. Present finite element results show good agreement with experiments for $[0_3/90]_s$ cylindrical panel and $[0/\pm45/90/]_s$ plate. The postbuckling compressive strength of $[0/90/\pm\theta]_s$ composite laminated cylindrical panel is independent of the initial buckling stress but high in the panel with large value of the bending stiffness in axial direction. In the several cylindrical panels, it is observed that the prebuckling compressive failures occur and result into the collapse before the buckling.

Analysis of Viscoplastic Softening Behavior of Concrete under Displacement Control (변위제어하에서 콘크리트의 점소성 연화거동해석)

  • Kim, Sang-Hwan
    • Proceedings of the Computational Structural Engineering Institute Conference
    • /
    • 1995.10a
    • /
    • pp.185-193
    • /
    • 1995
  • The softening behaviors of concrete have been the object of numerous experimental and numerical studies, because the load carrying capacity of cracked concrete structure is not zero. Numerical studies are devoted to the investigation of three-dimensional softening behaviors of concrete on the basis of a viscoplastic theory, which may be able to represent the effects of plasticity and also of rheology. In order to properly describe material behaviors corresponding to different stress levels, two surfaces in stress space are adopted; one is a yield surface, and the other is a failure or bounding surface. When a stress path reaches the failure surface, it is considered that the softening behaviors are initiated as micro-cracks coalesce and are simulated by assuming that the actual strain increments in the post-peak region are less than the equivalent viscoplastic strain increment. The experimental studies and the finite element analyses have been carried out under the displacement control. Numerically simulated results indicate that the model is able to predict the essential characteristics of concrete behaviors such as the non-linearity, stiffness degradation, different behaviors in tension and compression, and specially dilatation under uniaxial compression.

  • PDF

Ultimate Analysis of Reinforced Concrete Shear Walls with Opening (개구부가 있는 철근콘크리트 전단벽의 극한해석)

  • Hu, Nam-Ryun;You, Young-Hwa;Kim, Woon-Hak
    • Journal of the Korea institute for structural maintenance and inspection
    • /
    • v.5 no.1
    • /
    • pp.195-205
    • /
    • 2001
  • An analytical finite element approach to nonlinear behavior of reinforced concrete shear walls with opening under monotonic loading was presented in this paper. In order to achieve the objectives of present paper, the orthogonal anisotropic models for cracked reinforced concrete element based on smeared crack concept were used as the nonlinear material models of biaxial state of stress. The stiffness of cracked concrete was evaluated through the combined use of tension and compression stiffness models in and parallel directions of crack, respectively and shear transfer effect due to the aggregate interlocking at crack surface. The stress and strain of reinforcement in concrete was evaluated using the average stress and average strain relation with bond effect. based on smeared crack concept. The diagonal reinforcing bar was modeled using truss element with bond effect. A special significance of diagonal reinforcement near opening was given to the shear wall with opening and an effective distribution of diagonal reinforcement was presented in order to give an ultimate strength increment as well as a crack control.

  • PDF

Shear response estimate for squat reinforced concrete walls via a single panel model

  • Massone, Leonardo M.;Ulloa, Marco A.
    • Earthquakes and Structures
    • /
    • v.7 no.5
    • /
    • pp.647-665
    • /
    • 2014
  • Squat reinforced concrete walls require enough shear strength in order to promote flexural yielding, which creates the need for designers of an accurate method for strength prediction. In many cases, especially for existing buildings, strength estimates might be insufficient when more accurate analyses are needed, such as pushover analysis. In this case, estimates of load versus displacement are required for building modeling. A model is developed that predicts the shear load versus shear deformation of squat reinforced concrete walls by means of a panel formulation. In order to provide a simple, design-oriented tool, the formulation considers the wall as a single element, which presents an average strain and stress field for the entire wall. Simple material constitutive laws for concrete and steel are used. The developed models can be divided into two categories: (i) rotating-angle and (ii) fixed-angle models. In the first case, the principal stress/strain direction rotates for each drift increment. This situation is addressed by prescribing the average normal strain of the panel. The formation of a crack, which can be interpreted as a fixed principal strain direction is imposed on the second formulation via calibration of the principal stress/strain direction obtained from the rotating-angle model at a cracking stage. Two alternatives are selected for the cracking point: fcr and 0.5fcr (post-peak). In terms of shear capacity, the model results are compared with an experimental database indicating that the fixed-angle models yield good results. The overall response (load-displacement) is also reasonable well predicted for specimens with diagonal compression failure.

A simple prediction procedure of strain-softening surrounding rock for a circular opening

  • Wang, Feng;Zou, Jin-Feng
    • Geomechanics and Engineering
    • /
    • v.16 no.6
    • /
    • pp.619-626
    • /
    • 2018
  • A simple prediction procedure was investigated for calculating the stresses and displacements of a circular opening. Unlike existed approaches, the proposed approach starts each step with a radius increment. The stress for each annulus could be obtained analytically, while strain increments for each step can be determinate numerically from the compatility equation by finite difference approximation, flow rule and Hooke's law. In the successive manner, the distributions of stresses and displacements could be found. It should be noted that the finial radial stress and displacement were equal to the internal supporting pressure and deformation at the tunnel wall, respectively. By assuming different plastic radii, GRC and the evolution curve of plastic radii and internal supporting pressures could be obtained conveniently. Then the real plastic radius can be calculated by using linear interpolation in the evolution curve. Some numerical and engineering examples were performed to demonstrate the accuracy and validity for the proposed procedure. The comparisons results show that the proposed procedure was faster than that in Lee and Pietrucszczak (2008). The influence of annulus number and dilation on the accuracy of solutions was also investigated. Results show that the larger the annulus number was, the more accurate the solutions were. Solutions in Park et al. (2008) were significantly influenced by dilation.