Abstract

This paper presents a numerical study investigating the effect of masonry infill on the response of reinforced concrete (RC) frames subject to in-plane blast loading. Three-dimensional single-bay single-story masonry infilled reinforced concrete (MIRC) frames were modeled, in which a simplified micro-modeling approach was adopted for the masonry infill. The surface-based cohesive model was employed between the expanded brick units by adopting the traction-separation law. A non-integral modeling approach was considered with an appropriate contact algorithm between the infill wall and bounding RC frame. The dynamic material models with explicit dependency on strain rate were incorporated in the finite element (FE) models and validated against the experimental test data. The developed FE models of bare RC and MIRC frames were subjected to surface blasts with variable scaled distances representing the far-field, near-field, and close-in blasts. The effect of masonry infill on the response of RC frames subject to in-plane blast loading was investigated using the general-purpose FE software ABAQUS without employing user-defined subroutines. The blast response was characterized using displacements, energy dissipation, strain localization and accumulation, stiffness degradation, and damage modes. Results highlight the beneficial influence of masonry infill in reducing the local deformation and altering the failure modes of RC frames subject to in-plane blasts. However, results suggest that the effects of infill on the overall structural response, including axial, flexural, and shear demands, must be considered during the design of bounding RC frames. Furthermore, parametric studies were carried out based on varying masonry bonding patterns and wall thickness, number of bays and stories, and masonry infill heights, and provided conclusive remarks.

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