Abstract

The present study investigates the effect of reinforcement corrosion and axial compression ratio (ACR) on the seismic response of large-scale ductile reinforced concrete (RC) columns. 3D numerical models of sound and corroded RC columns were developed and validated with detailed experimentation. Various parameters, such as hysteresis and backbone curves, stiffness degradation, ductility, and energy dissipation, were evaluated for all the specimens. The numerical findings were then compared with the experimental findings. Subsequently, a thorough parametric study was executed to analyse the structural behaviour under varying corrosion degrees and ACR level combinations. It was observed that both sound and corroded specimens experienced significant degradation in terms of their strength, deformability, stiffness, and ductility due to elevated ACR levels. Moreover, increased ACR levels in both specimen types led to a decline in pre-peak and post-peak response trajectories, resulting in an early achievement of peak response at lower drift levels. The study’s outcome advocates the significance of incorporating ACR levels into the design philosophy of ductile reinforcements for RC columns.

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