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Reinforced Concrete Buildings: Behavior and Design
Reinforced Concrete Buildings: Behavior and Design
Reinforced Concrete Buildings: Behavior and Design
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Reinforced Concrete Buildings: Behavior and Design

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The objective of this ebook is to introduce civil undergraduate students to the behavior and design of reinforced concrete buildings. Chapter 1 covers an introduction to building design, calculation of demand, design methodologies and structural safety. Chapter 2 covers material properties of concrete and reinforcing steel. Chapters 3 to 10 covers design of reinforced concrete frame elements including beams, one-way slabs, columns, beam-column joints and spread footings. An introduction to the behavior and design of shear walls is also covered in Chapter 11. Seismic design considerations are briefly discussed at the end of Chapters 4, 8, 9 and 11 for beams, columns, beam-column joints and shear walls, respectively.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherBookBaby
Release dateJan 19, 2021
ISBN9781098356705
Reinforced Concrete Buildings: Behavior and Design

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    Reinforced Concrete Buildings - Ahmad A. Hamid

    Wall

    1

    INTRODUCTION

    1.1 Advantages and Characteristics of Reinforced Concrete

    Reinforced concrete is a composite material made of concrete and steel bars, see Figure 1.1. It merges the advantages of concrete (form, stiffness and durability) with those of steel bars (high tensile strength and ductiltiy) into a single material with excellent physical and mechanical properties. Longitudinal steel in form of reinforcing bars is placed on the tension side of the member to carry flexural tensile stress from bending (in case of beams) or from combined axial laod and bending (in case of columns). Transverse steel in form of stirrups (in beams) or ties (in columns) serves to carry diagonal tension from shear forces.

    Figure 1.1 Reinforced concrete as a composite material.

    1.2 Composite Action

    For composite action to work, adequate load transfer between the steel bars and the surrounding concrete has to be ensured via adequate development length of the steel bars. As such, the steel bar will develop its full tension capacity (yield strength times the bar cross sectional area) before it pullls out of the concrete. That is why reinforcing bars are deformed (Figure 1.2-a) to have adequate load transfer ability. Development length of straight bars ranges from 40-60 times the bar diameter. Using a 90 dgrees or 180 degrees hook (Figure 1.2-b) at the end of the bar can reduce the development length by roughly 50%

    Figure 1.2 Deformed reinforcing steel bars.

    1.3 Types of Reinforced Concrete Buildings

    The most common types of low-rise and mid-rise (up to 20 stories) reinforced concrete buildings are:

    1- Frame buildings (Figure 1.3)

    2- Wall buildings (Figure 1.4)

    3- Hybrid frame-wall buildings (Figure 1.5)

    Figure 1.3 RC Frame building.

    Figure 1.4 RC wall building

    Figure 1.5 Hybrid frame-wall building

    1.4 Floor Slabs

    The choice of the type of floor slabs for buildings depends on many factors such as the material used for the load resisting system (steel, concrete, masonry, timber), vertical load intensity, span and panel aspect ratio. The thickness of the floor slab is a critical parameter that affect the weight and cost of the structure. This is particularly true for highrise buildings. For example, reducing the slab thickness from say 6.5 in. to 6.0 in. for 5000 sq. ft building with 30 stories will save 0.5 x 5000 x 30 = 75,000 cu ft of concrete. This reduction in weight will reduce the column loads and foundation loads. It will also reduce inertia forces from earthquakes.

    Concrete is an excellent material for floor construction because of its high stiffness, fireproofing and good sound insulation properties. The selection of the floor system and the slab thickness is a key design parameter. The selection of the floor slab system depends on:

    1- Clear span between columns or shear walls

    2- Aspect ratio of the panel

    3- Stiffness of boundary beams, if any

    4- Load intensity

    5- Function of the building

    Figure 1.6 shows different types of floor slabs depending on span.

    Figure 1.6 Floor slabs.

    1.5 Structural Safety and Reliability

    There are three main reasons why safety factors should be incorporated in structural design:

    1- Variability in resistance

    . Variability of material strength (Figure 1.7-a)

    . Variability of dimensions and locations of members

    . Simplifying assumptions in design

    2- Variability in loading, see Figure 1.7-b

    3- Consequences of failure

    . Potential loss of life

    . Cost of replacement

    . Cost of lost time and revenue

    Figure 1.7 Examples of variability in strength and loads.

    Figure 1.8 Safety margins.

    Safety factors are based on a probabilistic approach. Safe and unsafe combinations of loading are shown in Figure 1.8. The term Y=R-S in Figure 1.8 is called safety margin. In this figure the shaded area represents the probability of failure. Because of economical reasons there will be always a very small probability of failure (typically 5%).

    Reliability is the ability of a system or component to perform its required functions under stated conditions for a specified period of time. Reliability presents ways in which products fail, the effects of failure and aspects of design, manufacture, maintenance and use which affect the likelihood of failure.

    Figure 1.8 shows the pressures that lead to the overall perception of risk. Reliability engineering has developed in response to the need to control these risks.

    Figure 1.8 Perceived risk.

    1.6 Structural Analysis

    The main objective of the analysis is to predict the response of buildings to loading. This can be measured by the resulting internal forces (axial force, shear force and bending moment) and deformations (deflections and rotations). Reinforced concrete frame structures are typically statically indeterminate. The following methods are used:

    1- Approximate methods such as the portal frame method and the cantilever method

    2- Classical methods for hand calculations such as the Moment Distribution Method

    3- Stiffness method for computer applications. Many powerful commercial software codes are available such as STAAD and SAP.

    4- ACI 318 shear and moment coefficients for continuous beams and one-way slabs.

    1.6.1 Effect of Continuity

    For horizontal spanning from point A to B the location of the supports and consequently span/continuty effect has a dramatic influence on the demand/internal forces and deflections. As shown in Fig. 1.9, for a simly supported beam AB the maximum moment at mid-span is wL²/8. If the support move to the inside, negative at the supports and positive moment at mid span develpe with values less than wL²/8. As the supports move close to the middle negative moment equal to wL²/8 develop. For a = 0.2L, equal negative and positive moments (0.02 wL²) develop leading to an optimum design.

    Figure 1.9 Effect of continuity on beam moments.

    1.6.2 Effect of Boundary Conditions

    As shown in Fig. 1.10, the shape and maximum moments are affected by the boundary conditions at the supports. For a simply supported beam maximum moment of wL²/8 occurs at mid-span with maximum rotation θ= wL³/24 at the supports. For a fixed-fixed beam negative moment of wL²/12 develops at the supports with less positive moment of wL²/24 (compared to the simply supported case) at mid-span. In this case rotation is zero at the supports and maximum deflection is less comapred to the simply supported case. Por partil constraints at the supports the negative moment at the supports will be less than wL²/24 whereas the postive moment at mid-span will be greater than wL²/24.

    Figure 1.10 Effect of boundary conditions on beam moments.

    1.6.3 Shear and Moment Cofficients for Continuious Beams and One-Way Slabs

    Figure 1.11 shows ACI 318 shear and moment coefficients for continuous beams where moment is Cm wL² and shear is Cv wL/2. It is assumed that live loads are not greater than three times the dead loads and therefore pattern loading is ignored (for LL/DL ratio less than or equal to 3.0) and the total full dead and live loads are considered.

    1.6.4 Pattern Loading

    For heavy live loads that are more than three times the dead loads the effect of pattern loading should be accounted for. Ignoring the effect of pattern loading in this case would result in an underestimation of maximum moments and shear forces at the member ends. This effect will be more significant in case of long catilevers and dissimilar spans. Some computer codes/software consider the effect of pattern loading in the analysis of frames under vertical loads.

    Figure 1.11 Shear and moment coefficients for continuous beams.

    1.7 Structural Design

    1.7.1 Objectives of Structural Design

    The main objectives/goals of structural design are:

    1- Adequate performance under service loads. This is referred to as Serviceabilty limit state and it concerns with deflection limits, vibration control and crack control.

    2- Adequate factor of safety against failure/collapse in case of overloading.

    3- Economy (initial and long-term).

    1.7.2 Design Loads

    Gravity Loads (dead and live loads) for beams and columns can be calculated using the concept of tributary area, see Figure 1.12. Note that the loads on beams are localized whereas the axial loads on columns are accumulative

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