Introduction To Reinforced Concrete
Introduction To Reinforced Concrete
Introduction To Reinforced Concrete
Introduction to Reinforced
Concrete
1
Acknowledgement
This Powerpoint presentation was
prepared by Dr. Terry Weigel,
University of Louisville. This work
and other contributions to the text
by Dr. Weigel are gratefully
acknowledged.
2
Concrete and Reinforced
Concrete
Concrete – a mixture of fine aggregate (sand),
coarse aggregate (eg, limestone), cement,
water, air and admixtures.
Admixtures are materials, other than cement,
aggregate and water, that are added to
concrete either before or during its mixing
to alter its properties, such as workability,
curing temperature range, set time or
color.
3
Concrete and Reinforced
Concrete
Concrete has high compressive strength and
low tensile strength
4
Advantages of Reinforced
Concrete
High compressive strength relative to unit
cost
5
Advantages of Reinforced
Concrete
Reinforced concrete structures have a long
service life
7
Disadvantages of Reinforced
Concrete
Concrete has a low tensile strength, requiring
use of reinforcing steel
10
Portland Cement
Type I – common, all-purpose cement
Type II – low heat of hydration and some
resistance to sulfates
Type III – high, early strength; high heat of
hydration
Type IV – low heat of hydration
Type V – used for concrete with exposure to
high concentration of sulfates
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Portland Cement
Concrete made with Type I portland cement
must cure about two weeks to achieve
sufficient strength to permit removal of
forms and application of small loads
Concrete made with Type I portland cement
reaches design strength in about 28 days
Concrete made with Type III portland
cement reaches design strength in three
to seven days
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Portland Cement
Concrete made with Type III portland
cement produces high heat of hydration;
more likely to cause cracking
13
Air-Entraining Admixtures
Air-entraining admixtures for concrete must
conform to either ASTM C260 or ASTM
C618
Air-entraining admixtures produce small air
bubbles in the concrete
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Other Admixtures
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Properties of Reinforced
Concrete
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Compressive Strength
20
Compressive Strength
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Compression Test Setup for f’c
Concrete Stress-Strain
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Concrete Stress-Strain
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Concrete Stress-Strain
Regardless of compressive strength, all
concretes
reach
their
maximum
strength
at a strain
of about
0.002
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Concrete Stress-Strain
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Concrete Stress-Strain
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Static Modulus of Elasticity
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Poisson’s Ratio
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Shrinkage
Workable concrete requires more water than
is necessary to fully hydrate the cement
As concrete cures, water not used in
hydration begins to evaporate
The effect of evaporating water is shrinkage
and cracking of the concrete
Shrinkage occurs for many years, but about
90 percent occurs within the first year
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Shrinkage
The amount of moisture lost depends on
distance from the point in the concrete to
the surface
Members with large surface area have a
higher rate of shrinkage
The amount of shrinkage depends on exposure
of the member
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Shrinkage
Keep mixing water to a minimum
Cure thoroughly
Place concrete in small sections
Use construction joints
Use shrinkage reinforcement
Use dense, non-porous aggregate
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Creep
Creep is deformation under sustained load
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Modulus of Rupture Test
ASTM C78
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Modulus of Rupture Test
Flexural formula for
fr (modulus of rupture) fr
Mc
P/2 P/2 I
PL
M
6
bh3
I
12
PL h
L/3 L/3 PL
fr 2
6
bh3 bh 2
12
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ACI Value for fr
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Split Cylinder Test
Split Cylinder Test
ASTM C496
2P
fr
LD
L length of specimen
D diameter of specimen
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Aggregates
Aggregates occupy about three-quarters of
the concrete volume
Aggregate is relatively inexpensive and
economical concrete uses as much
aggregate as possible, relative to the
other components
Concrete aggregate consists of a fine
component (sand) and a coarse component
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Aggregates
Aggregate that passes a No 4 sieve is
considered to be fine aggregate
Aggregate not passing a No 4 sieve is considered
to be coarse aggregate (3/4 in. most common)
ACI Code Section 3.3.2 limits aggregate size:
one-fifth narrowest dimension between
sides of forms; one-third the depth of
slabs; three-quarters of the minimum clear
space between reinforcement
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Aggregates
Cement
Reinforcing Steel
Bars or welded wire fabric (WWF)
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Welded Wire Fabric (WWF)
WWF
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ASTM Reinforcing Steel
Standards
ASTM A615 – deformed or plain billet steel –
most commonly used
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Reinforcing Steel Identification
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Deformed Rebars
Deformed Rebar
Ribs
Loads and Load Effects
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Loads and Load Effects
Types of loads encountered when designing
reinforced concrete: dead, live, roof live,
snow and ice, rain, wind and seismic
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ACI 318 Load Combinations
ACI Code Section 5.3.1 gives the load
combinations to be used in reinforced
concrete design
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ACI 318 Load Combinations
(a) U 1.4 D
(b) U 1.2 D 1.6 L 0.5 Lr or S or R
(c) U 1.2 D 1.6 Lr or S or R L or 0.5W
(d) U 1.2 D 1.0W L 0.5 Lr or S or R
(e) U 1.2 D 1.0 E L 0.2 S
(f) U 0.9 D 1.0W
(g) U 0.9 D 1.0 E
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ACI 318 Load Combinations
D -> dead load
L -> live load
Lr -> roof live load
F -> weight or pressure created by fluids
T -> temperature, creep, shrinkage, differential
settlement
S -> snow load
W -> wind load
E -> seismic load
H -> lateral earth pressure, groundwater pressure or
pressure from bulk materials
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Example 4.1
The compressive gravity axial load for a building
column are: L = 300 k, D = 150 k and Lr = 60 k.
The compressive axial force in the column due to
other loads are: wind = 112 k, seismic = 50 k.
Tensile axial force in the column due to other
loads are: wind = 96 k, seismic = 40 k. Determine
the critical design loads based on the ACI load
combinations . Compressive loads are positive
(this is an arbitrary choice).
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Example 4.1
5.3.1a U 1.4 150 k 210 k
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Example 4.1
5.3.1e U 1.2 150 k 1.0 50 k 1.0 300 k 0.2 0 k 530 k
5.3.1e U 1.2 150 k 1.0 40 k 1.0 300 k 0.2 0 k 440 k