Abstract

In this paper, the plastic properties of prestressed high-strength steel reinforced concrete (PHSSRC) beams are studied, by performing static load tests on eight built-in Q460 and Q690 prestressed high-strength steel reinforced concrete continuous beams and one built-in Q355 prestressed steel reinforced concrete (PSRC) continuous beam. The design parameters of the specimens were the steel strength grade, the steel ratio, the comprehensive reinforcement ratio, and the stirrup ratio. The failure mode, load–deflection curve, internal force redistribution ability, curvature ductility, plastic hinge performance, and moment modification coefficient of continuous beams under the influence of various parameters were analyzed to measure the plastic performance of the continuous beams. These results show that after the plastic hinge is formed in the middle support and mid-span of the prestressed high-strength steel reinforced concrete continuous beam, the test beam eventually becomes a rotating mechanism and is destroyed with increasing load. The built-in high-strength steel can significantly improve the bearing capacity of the specimen, and the maximum increase in the bearing capacity is 37.3%. The specimen still has a high bearing capacity after reaching the ultimate bearing capacity. With a decrease in the steel ratio, the degree of internal force redistribution is deepened, the curvature ductility is improved, and the plastic performance is enhanced. Increasing the comprehensive reinforcement ratio and the stirrup ratio can improve the plastic performance of the specimen. The calculation formula of the equivalent plastic hinge zone length is proposed. The calculation formula of the moment modification coefficient, with the relative plastic rotation angle and relative compression zone height as independent variables, is established. When the relative plastic rotation angle is not greater than 0.829 × 10−5, the moment modification coefficient increases with increasing plastic rotation angle and is not greater than 0.37. In the range of 0.3~0.4, the moment modification coefficient decreases with increasing height of the relative compression zone.

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