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Assessment of RC walls with cut-out openings strengthened by FRP composites using a rigid-plastic approach

Abstract

Building refurbishment works frequently require the cutting of new openings in concrete walls. Cutting new openings weakens the overall response of such elements, so they usually require strengthening. However, current design codes offer little guidance on strengthening walls with openings, and less still on the use of non-metallic reinforcements such as FRP (Fibre Reinforced Polymers) to ensure sufficient load bearing capacity. This paper proposes a new procedure based on limit analysis theory for evaluating the ultimate load of walls with cut-out openings that have been strengthened with carbon-FRP (CFRP). First, the approach is verified against transverse (out-of-plane) and axial (in-plane) loading for
unstrengthened specimens. These loading types result in different failure mechanisms: transverse loading leads to failure due to yielding/rupture of the steel reinforcement while axial loading leads to failure by concrete crushing. Second, the proposed method is further developed for CFRP-strengthened specimens under axial loading. It accounts for the contribution of CFRP indirectly, by updating the concrete
model with an enhanced compressive strength as a result of confining the piers. Predictions made using the new method agree closely with experimental results.
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Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Cosmin Popescu
  • Jacob W. Scmidt
  • Per Goltermann
  • Gabriel Sas

Affiliation

  • SINTEF Narvik
  • Technical University of Denmark
  • Luleå University of Technology

Year

2017

Published in

Engineering structures

ISSN

0141-0296

Volume

150

Page(s)

585 - 598

View this publication at Norwegian Research Information Repository