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Shear Strength and Shear-friction Strength of RC Walls with Grade 550 MPa Reinforcing Bars : 550 MPa급 철근을 사용한 철근콘크리트 벽체의 전단강도와 전단마찰강도

DC Field Value Language
dc.contributor.advisor박홍근-
dc.contributor.author백장운-
dc.date.accessioned2017-07-13T06:36:33Z-
dc.date.available2017-07-13T06:36:33Z-
dc.date.issued2017-02-
dc.identifier.other000000142733-
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10371/118674-
dc.description학위논문 (박사)-- 서울대학교 대학원 : 건축학과, 2017. 2. 박홍근.-
dc.description.abstractIn the construction of nuclear power plants, a number of large diameter reinforcing bars are used in massive reinforced concrete walls, which significantly affects the constructability and economical efficiency. After the recent flurry of earthquakes, the structural safety requirements for nuclear power plants have increased, which has further increased the number of bars required for reinforced concrete walls. Thus, to enhance the constructability and economical efficiency, and to satisfy the increased safety requirement of nuclear power plant walls, the use of high-strength reinforcing bars needs to be considered. However, the yield strength of shear reinforcement is limited in current design codes, to ensure yielding of shear reinforcement before shear failure, and to control the width of potential diagonal shear cracks. In this study, an extensive range of experimental studies was performed, to provide evidence for use of high-strength reinforcement in RC walls, potentially leading to modification of the current design provision of shear reinforcement for reinforced concrete walls.
Because of the high safety requirement in nuclear power plant walls, the shear reinforcement ratio is generally close to the permissible maximum shear reinforcement ratio specified by the current design codes. Considering the unconservative safety margin for heavily reinforced concrete members, the validity of the maximum shear reinforcement ratio needs to be verified, when higher-strength reinforcing bars are used for shear reinforcement. Walls with aspect ratios of 1.0, 2.0, and 0.5 were tested under cyclic lateral loading to investigate the effect of Grade 550 MPa reinforcing bars on the shear strength. The test parameters included grade of shear reinforcement, shear reinforcement ratio, failure mode, concrete compressive strength, shape of wall cross-section, and the presence of boundary confinement hoops. The ratios of the test shear strength to the prediction by ACI 349 (i.e., strength ratios) were 1.45-2.61 and 1.11-1.74 for the general and seismic provisions, respectively. The test results of walls with Grade 550 MPa re-bars were comparable to those of walls with Grade 420 MPa re-bars for several evaluations: failure mode, strength ratio, strains of shear reinforcement, shear deformation, deformation contribution, average crack width, and energy dissipation.
In addition to the limited yield strength of shear reinforcement, current design codes require minimum shear reinforcement to assure the safety of reinforced concrete walls against brittle shear failure. In actual design of walls, the amount and placement of shear reinforcement are often governed by the minimum shear reinforcement ratio, which significantly affects the economical efficiency and constructability. This is a probable case even in nuclear power plant walls, depending on various design condtions. Therefore, when high-strength reinforcing bars are used for shear reinforcement, it should be considered whether the minimum shear reinforcement ratio required by current design codes may be decreased. To investigate the effect of high-strength re-bars on the shear strength and minimum shear reinforcement, slender walls (aspect ratio of 2.5) with Grade 500 MPa shear reinforcement were tested under cyclic lateral loading. The test parameters were failure mode, the grade and ratio of shear reinforcement, concrete compressive strength, and axial compression. The test results of walls with Grade 500 MPa re-bars were directly compared with those of walls with Grade 400 MPa re-bars, which is currently permitted in the current design codes. The grade of shear reinforcement did not significantly affect failiure mode, strength ratio, strains of shear reinforcement, deformation contribution, average crack width, and energy dissipation and lateral stiffness.
Under repeated cyclic loading, squat walls with aspect ratio smaller than 0.5, which are commonly used for nuclear power plants, are vulnerable to shear sliding at a construction joint. Thus, generally in the design of squat walls, the number of vertical re-bars is determined by shear sliding rather than other failure mechanisms such as flexural yielding and shear failure. Thus, for the use of high-strength reinforcing bars for nuclear power plant walls, it is crucial to investigate the effect of high-strength re-bars on the shear-friction strength. Low-rise walls were tested to verify the applicability of Grade 550 MPa reinforcing bars to the design of shear sliding. The test parameters were the grade of re-bars, aspect ratio, reinforcement ratio, and surface condition of the construction joint, axial compression, presence of additional shear-friction reinforcement. The test results showed that the specimens were susceptible to sliding failure and the stress of Grade 550 MPa shear-friction bars was not reached to the yield strength. Particularly, the shear-friction strengths under cyclic loading were smaller than those subjected to monotonic loading reported in previous studies. The applicability of current design methods was evaluated for the shear-friction design of walls with Grade 550 MPa bars. The design equations predicted by fib Model Code 2010 and Eurocode 8, which consider both the shear-friction and dowel action, were also used for the evaluation. Based on the test results of specimens with significant sliding deformation, dowel resistance-slip relationship of reinforced concrete squat walls with a construction joint was proposed.
As such, the seismic resistance of reinforced concrete walls varies according to many parameters: aspect ratio, failure mode, reinforcement ratio, grade of reinforcing bars, concrete compressive strength, shape of wall cross-section, and presence of boundary elements. Although previous design equations have been used to predict the shear strength and shear-friction strength of RC walls, the strength predctions show huge scatter. To accurately predict failure mechanism and shear capacity of reinforced concrete shear walls regardless of material properties such as grade of reinforcing bars (and corresponding reinforcement ratio) or concrete compressive strength, existing strain-based methods were adopted and proposed: 1) diagonal tension failure, 2) web crushing failure, and 3) sliding failure mechanisms, which can be commonly observed in reinforced concrete walls. The load-drift ratio relationships of test specimens in the present study were compared with those predicted by the strain-based method. A set of database of reinforced concrete walls was collected including previous test results reported by others, as well as the present test results, and was used for vertification of the strain-based strength prediction. The predictions by the strain-based method yield most uniform results among existing equations, with a minimum value of coefficient of variance. The predictions were not affected by effective re-bar strength, concrete compressive strength, and axial load ratio.
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dc.description.tableofcontentsChapter 1. Introduction 1
1.1 General 1
1.2 Scope and Objectives 8
1.3 Outline of Dissertation 10

Chapter 2. Literature Review 13
2.1 Current Design Codes 13
2.1.1 ACI 318-14 (ACI Committee 318, 2014) or ACI 349-13 (ACI Committee 349, 2013) 13
2.1.2 Eurocode 2 (British Standards Institution, 2004) 20
2.1.3 Eurocode 8 (British Standards Institution, 2003) 25
2.1.4 ASCE 41-13 (ASCE/SEI 41-13, 2014) 29
2.1.5 ASCE 43-05 (Nuclear Standards Committee, 2005) 30
2.2 Review of Previous Researches 31
2.2.1 Cardenas et al. (1973) 31
2.2.2 Barda et al. (1977) 32
2.2.3 Oesterle et al. (1984) 34
2.2.4 Wood (1990) 36
2.2.5 Sanchez-Alejandre and Alocer (2010) 37
2.2.6 Carrillo and Alocer (2013) 39
2.2.7 Gulec and Whittaker (2011) 41
2.2.8 Kassem (2015) 42
2.3 Previous Experimental Studies for Shear Walls with High-strength Reinforcement 47
2.3.1 Sato et al. (1989) 47
2.3.2 Kabeyasawa and Hiraishi (1998) 47
2.3.3 Park et al. (2015) 49
2.3.4 Cheng et al. (2016) 50
2.4 Summary - Design Provisions of RC Walls 52
2.4.1 Design Shear Strength 52
2.4.2 Minimum Shear Reinforcement Ratio 53
2.4.3 Design Shear Sliding Strength 54

Chapter 3. Shear Strength of RC Walls with Various Aspect Ratios 57
3.1 Introduction 57
3.2 Test Plan 62
3.2.1 Maximum Reinforcement Ratio 62
3.2.2 Major Test Parameters 66
3.2.3 Design of Test Specimens 75
3.2.4 Test Procedure and Instrumentation 83
3.3 Test Results 87
3.3.1 Damages and Failure modes 87
3.3.2 Lateral Load-Displacement Relationships 98
3.3.3 Strains of Reinforcing bars 114
3.3.4 Panel Shear Deformation 128
3.3.5 Deformation Contributions 131
3.3.6 Average Diagonal Crack Width 138
3.3.7 Energy Dissipation 143
3.4 Effect of Design Parameters on Shear Strength 145
3.4.1 Yield Strength of Horizontal Bars 145
3.4.2 Reinforcing Bar Ratio and Concrete Compressive Strength 145
3.4.3 Confinement Hoops at Wall Boundaries 146
3.4.4 Barbell-shaped Cross Section with Boundary Confinement Hoops 146
3.5 Shear Strength Predictions by Existing Design Methods 148
3.6 Discussion 154

Chapter 4. Shear Strength of RC Walls with Minimum Shear Reinforcement 159
4.1 Introduction 159
4.2 Experimental Program 164
4.2.1 Major Design Parameters 164
4.2.2 Test Specimens 164
4.2.3 Test Procedure and Instrumentation 171
4.3 Test Results 173
4.3.1 Failure Modes 173
4.3.2 Lateral Load-displacement Relationships 179
4.3.3 Strains of Reinforcing Bars 184
4.3.4 Deformation Contributions 189
4.3.5 Average Diagonal Crack Width 192
4.3.6 Energy Dissipation and Lateral Stiffness 195
4.4 Comparison of Shear Strength Predictions 197
4.5 Discussion 200

Chapter 5. Shear-friction Strength of RC Walls under Cyclic Loading 203
5.1 Introduction 203
5.2 Shear Sliding Predictions 207
5.2.1 ACI 349 and ACI 318 207
5.2.2 Eurocode 2 208
5.2.3 Eurocode 8 209
5.2.4 Harriess equation 210
5.2.5 fib Model Code 2010 211
5.3 Test Plan 214
5.3.1 Major Test Parameters and Specimen Details 214
5.3.2 Test Procedure and Instrumentation 223
5.4 Test Results 225
5.4.1 Load-displacement Relationships 225
5.4.2 Failure Modes 231
5.4.3 Strains of Reinforcing Bars 237
5.4.4 Deformation Contributions 246
5.5 Evaluation of Design Strength of Shear-friction Bars 251
5.5.1 Shear-friction Mechanism 254
5.5.2 Combined Shear Sliding Mechanism 258
5.5.3 Dowel Mechanism 263
5.6 Discussion 270

Chapter 6. Strain-based Strength Prediction 273
6.1 Overview 273
6.2 Moment-curvature Relationships (M-ϕ curve) 277
6.2.1 General 277
6.2.2 Material Model 277
6.2.3 Convergence Scheme for the Depth of Compressive Zone c 281
6.2.4 Verification of Approximate M-ϕ curve 281
6.3 Capacity Curves 283
6.3.1 Diagonal Tension Failure 283
6.3.2 Diagonal Compression Failure (Web Crushing) 288
6.3.3 Shear Sliding Failure 292
6.3.4 Local Failures 295
6.4 Limitation of Strain-based Strength Prediction 297
6.4.1 Qualitative Threshold of Sliding for the Proposed Model 297
6.4.2 Quantative Threshold of Sliding for the Proposed Model 302
6.4.3 Other Limitations 303
6.5 Verification of Strain-based Strength Prediction 305
6.5.1 Comparison of Load-Drift Ratio Relationships 305
6.5.2 Statistical Comparison 317
6.6 Discussion 333

Chapter 7. Conclusions 337

References 347

Appendix A: Matlab Code for Strain-based Stregnth Prediction 359
Appendix B: Wall Database 375

초 록 396
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dc.formatapplication/pdf-
dc.format.extent26328991 bytes-
dc.format.mediumapplication/pdf-
dc.language.isoen-
dc.publisher서울대학교 대학원-
dc.subjecthigh-strength reinforcement-
dc.subjectGrade 550 MPa reinforcement-
dc.subjectshear strength-
dc.subjectshear-friction strength-
dc.subjectnuclear power plant walls-
dc.subjectlow-rise RC walls-
dc.subjectcyclic loading-
dc.subjectstrain-based strength prediction-
dc.subject.ddc690-
dc.titleShear Strength and Shear-friction Strength of RC Walls with Grade 550 MPa Reinforcing Bars-
dc.title.alternative550 MPa급 철근을 사용한 철근콘크리트 벽체의 전단강도와 전단마찰강도-
dc.typeThesis-
dc.description.degreeDoctor-
dc.citation.pages398-
dc.contributor.affiliation공과대학 건축학과-
dc.date.awarded2017-02-
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