Abstract

Numerical simulation results of laboratory tests on reinforced concrete beams subjected to four-point bending for a separate variation of the height and length were presented. Due to the lack of a geometrical similarity, two major failure mechanisms were observed: flexural failure mechanism with plastic yielding of reinforcement and shear failure mechanism with two different modes: brittle diagonal tension and brittle diagonal shear-compression. The shear strength increased with increasing effective height and decreased with increasing shear span-effective height ratio. In simulations, the finite element method was used, based on a coupled elasto-plastic-damage constitutive model for concrete under plane stress conditions. The constitutive model was enhanced by integral-type non-locality in the softening regime to yield mesh-independent results. The bond-slip law was assumed between concrete and reinforcement. Two-dimensional numerical calculations under plane stress conditions satisfactorily reproduced both experimental shear strengths and failure mechanisms with one set of input parameters. In addition, the effect of different material constants on strength and fracture was comprehensively studied. Advantages and shortcomings of the numerical approach were discussed.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call