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CE 342

FUNDAMENTALS OF
REINFORCED CONCRETE
CHAPTER 1
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES
OF CONRETE

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Mechanical Properties of Concrete


Unlike steel, the mechanical properties of
concrete in compression and tension differ
from each other.
Concrete is strong in compression, but weak in
Compression
Tension
tension.

Compression

Tension

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Mechanical Properties of Concrete


The tensile strength of concrete is on the order
of 1/10 1/20 of its compressive strength.
In order to improve its tensile properties, steel
reinforcing bars are placed inside plain
concrete.

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Reinforced Concrete
Reinforced concrete is the result of the
combination of plain concrete and reinforcing
steel.
This combination of concrete and steel has
favorable mechanical properties both in
compression and in tension.
In a reinforced concrete member, compressive
forces are mainly resisted by the concrete,
while the steel reinforcement is responsible for
resisting the tensile forces.
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Reinforced Concrete
Load

Load

Reinforcement

Sudden Fracture

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Reinforced Concrete
Concrete

Steel

- Strong in compression

- Weak in compression (buckling)

- Weak in tension (cracking)

- Strong in tension

- Creep and shrinkage

- No creep and shrinkage

- No corrosion

- Corrosion

- Good fire resistance

- Poor fire resistance

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Reinforced Concrete
As engineers, the most important mechanical
properties of concrete for us are its
compressive strength, tensile strength, and
modulus of elasticity.
Normally, the compressive strength of
concrete is determined by testing, and the
tensile strength and modulus of elasticity are
expressed in terms of the compressive
strength.
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Uniaxial Compressive Strength of


Concrete
The term concrete strength is usually used to
indicate the uniaxial compressive strength of
concrete.
The compressive strength of concrete is defined as
the strength of 28 days old specimens tested under
monotonic uniaxial compressive load.
Testing of cylindrical samples with 15 cm diameter
and 30 cm height is standard.
Cube specimens of 15 cm15 cm15 cm are also
being used.

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Uniaxial Compressive Strength of


Concrete

f
c

cylinder

0.85 0.80 f c cube

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Uniaxial Compressive Strength of


Concrete

Cylinder Specimen

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Uniaxial Compressive Strength of


Concrete

Cube Specimen

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Uniaxial Compressive Strength of


Concrete
There are three failure modes for cylinders.
a) Under axial compression concrete fails in shear.
b) The separation of the specimen into columnar pieces
by what is known as splitting or columnar fracture.
c) Combination of shear and splitting failure.

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Factors Affecting Concrete Strength


Water/Cement Ratio:
Typically: 0.35 0.45
Smaller w/c ratio stronger concrete

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Factors Affecting Concrete Strength


Age of concrete:

Concrete Strength by Age

Stress as a percentage of ultimate

Concrete is a time-dependent
material and its strength increases
as it gets older.

1.6
1.4
1.2
1
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
0

500

1000

1500

2000

Age of concrete (days)

Age of
Concrete

7 days

14 days

Strength
Ratio

0.67

0.86

28 days 3 months 6 months


1.00

1.17

1.23

1 year

2 year

5 year

1.27

1.31

1.35

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Factors Affecting Concrete Strength


Speed of loading:
Higher the loading rate, higher the measured
strength will be.
Stress as a
percentage
of ultimate
Strain rate =
0.001/100days
0.001/hr
0.001/min
Concrete strain

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Factors Affecting Concrete Strength


Size of specimen:
Smaller the specimen, higher the measured
strength will be.
In a bigger specimen, the chance of having defects
(viods, local cracks, etc.) is higher.

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Stress-Strain Characteristics of Concrete

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Stress-Strain Characteristics of Concrete


Concrete Classes and Strengths (TS 500, Table 3.2)
Characteristic
Concrete Compressive Strength
Classes
fck28
fck28
(MPa)
(kgf/cm2)

Equivalent Cube (15


cm) Compressive
Strength

Characteristic
Tensile Strength

(MPa)

(kgf/cm2)

fctk
(MPa)

Modulus of
Elasticity at 28
days

fctk
Ec
Ec
(kgf/cm2) (MPa) (kgf/cm2)

C16

16

160

20

200

1.4

14

27 000

270 000

C18

18

180

22

220

1.5

15

27 500

275 000

C20

20

200

25

250

1.6

16

28 000

280 000

C25

25

250

30

300

1.8

18

30 000

300 000

C30

30

300

37

370

1.9

19

32 000

320 000

C35

35

350

45

450

2.1

21

33 000

330 000

C40

40

400

50

500

2.2

22

34 000

340 000

C45

45

450

55

550

2.3

23

36 000

360 000

C50

50

500

60

600

2.5

25

37 000

370 000

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Tensile Strength of Concrete

Several methods of determining the concrete


tensile strength (fct):

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Tensile Strength of Concrete


i.

Direct-Tension Test:

The most direct way of measuring the tensile


strength.
Not a practical test.
fct
P
P

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Tensile Strength of Concrete


ii. Split-Cylinder Test:

15cm 30cm
cylinder specimen

f cts

2P
LD

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Tensile Strength of Concrete


iii. Modulus of Rupture Test:

Four-point bending (two-point loading)


Three-point bending (third point loading)

f ctf

6M
b h2

L/2

L/2

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Tensile Strength of Concrete

f ct
Direct tension test

f ctf
Modulus of rupture test

cts
Split cylinder test

f ctf f cts f ct

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Relationship Between Compressive and


Tensile Strength of Concrete
Tensile strength of concrete is proportional to
the square-root of the compressive strength.
The proportionality constant depends on many
factors, such as the conrete strength and the
test method used to determine the tensile
strength.

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Relationship Between Compressive and


Tensile Strength of Concrete
The following relations can be used as a rule
of thumb:
Direct tensile strength : f ct 0.35 f c
Split tensile strength : f cts 0.50 f c

( f c in MPa)
( f c in MPa)

Flexural tensile strength : f ct 0.64 f c

( f c in MPa)

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Modulus of Elasticity of Concrete


Modulus of elasticity is defined as the slope of
the stress-strain curve.
However, because concrete is not a linear
material, there is no unique way of
determining the modulus of elasticity of
concrete.

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Modulus of Elasticity of Concrete

The three methods that are commonly used are


1.
2.
3.

Initial modulus
Secant modulus
Tangent modulus

Point A corresponds to a
stress level of 0.5fc.

Point B corresponds to a
stress level of 0.4-0.5fc.

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Modulus of Elasticity of Concrete


Even though the modulus of elasticity of
concrete depends on many variables, the
following relationship can be used to calculate
the modulus of elasticity using the known
value of compressive strength of concrete.
Ec 3250 f c 14.000 ( f c in MPa)

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Behavior of Concrete
under Triaxial Stresses
Strength and ductility of concrete under
triaxial compressive stresses are greater than
those under uniaxial compression.

Tests have shown that :


f cc f c 4 2

2 : lateral comp. stress

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Time Dependent
Deformation of Concrete: Shrinkage
Shrinkage is the decrease in the volume of
concrete during hardening and drying.
shrinakge

to

Time

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Time Dependent
Deformation of Concrete: Shrinkage
The amount of shrinkage depends on the
amount of water evaporates from concrete
mixture.
Therefore, shrinkage is a function of:
Temperature of the environment,
Humidity of the emvironment,
Surface area of the member, and
The water content of the concrete mixture.

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Time Dependent
Deformation of Concrete: Shrinkage
Shrinkage causes cracking when structural members
restrain each other against volume changes.
Also, shrinkage becomes important for long walls and
slabs with large areas.
concrete column

concrete slab

Large area of slab:


Large volume changes due
to shrinkage
Restrain by walls
Cracking of slab

concrete column

construction joint

Solution is to place
construction joints in
slab.

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Time Dependent
Deformation of Concrete: Creep
Creep is the time-dependent deformation of concrete
that occurs under constant compressive load.

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Time Dependent
Deformation of Concrete: Creep
Different from shrinkage, creep occurs only if
the member is loaded (in compression).
Creep depends on:
Age of concrete: Creep is less for older concrete.
w/c ratio of the mixture: Creep increases with w/c
ratio.
Humidity of the environment: Creep is less when
humidity is high.
The level of sustained stress
Time: Creep rate decreases with time.

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Time Dependent Deformation of Concrete

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Time Dependent Deformation of Concrete

f can be as high as 2-3 times i.


Therefore to calculate the long-term deflection,
modulus of elasticity has to be reduced by 1/2-1/3.

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Time Dependent Deformation of Concrete

c 2 c1

Placing reinforcement in the


compression zone (in
addition to the tension
reinforcement) will reduce
the creep deformation.

with
compression
steel
without
compression
steel

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Time Dependent Deformation of Concrete


Use the following rule of thumb in
design of compression members:
Limit the axial load carried by the column to
0.75No (creep limit). Above this value,
creep failure is possible.

N o : axial load capacity of the column

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Mechanical Properties of Steel Reinforcement


Plain bars (very limited use anymore)

Deformed bars (better bond to concrete than plain bar)

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Mechanical Properties of Steel


Reinforcement
Manufacturing process:
Hot-rolled bars: Mechanical properties will depend
on the chemical composition.

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Mechanical Properties of Steel Reinforcement


Manufacturing process:
Cold-worked bars: Subjected to mechanical
processing .
Molecular structure changes during cold-working.
Strength increases, but the strain capacity (ductility)
decreases.Therefore, the Turkish Seismic Code
prohibits the use of cold-worked bars in seismic force
resisting members.

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Mechanical Properties of Steel Reinforcement


Welded Wire Fabric:
Produced by welding small diameter wires in two
orthogonal directions.
Widely used in slabs and walls.

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Mechanical Properties of Steel Reinforcement


Bar sizes:
Bar Designation

Diameter (mm)

10

10

12

12

14

14

16

16

18

18

20

20

22

22

24

24

26

26

In North America
Bar Designation

Diameter (in.)

#5

5/8

#8

8/8

#12

12/8

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Mechanical Properties of Steel Reinforcement

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Mechanical Properties of Steel Reinforcement


f y : yield strength
f su : ultimate strength

y : yield strain
su : ultimate strain (strain capacity)
Es 200.000 MPa (2 10 6 kgf/cm 2 )

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Mechanical Properties of Steel Reinforcement


Bar types and properties:
Mechanical Properties of Reinforcing Steel (TS 500 Table 3.1)
Reinforcing Steel
Mechanical Properties

Welded Wire Fabric

Hot Rolled
S220a S420a

Cold Worked

S500a

S420b

S500bs

S500bk

Yield Strength (MPa)

220

420

500

420

500

500

Ultimate Strength (MPa)

340

500

550

550

550

550

Yield Strain (%)

18

12

12

10

Ultimate Strain (%)

18

10

10

10

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Mechanical
Properties of
Steel
Reinforcement

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Mechanical Properties of Steel Reinforcement


Steel bars can not prevent cracking of concrete.
Rebars are placed inside concrete to keep the crack
width at acceptable levels.
All economically-designed reinforced concrete
members will have hairline cracks.

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Non-Metallic Reinforcement for Concrete

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Non-Metallic Reinforcement for Concrete

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Non-Metallic Reinforcement for


Concrete
Fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP) reinforcement
Fibers in resin
Fiber types
Carbon fibers (CFRP)
Glass fibers (GFRP)
Aramid fibers (AFRP)

Resin keeps the fibers together. It does not provide


strength.
Used in applications where corrosion is a problem.
High strength (~500-2000 MPa)
Low modulus of elasticity (20-50% of Esteel)
Extremely brittle

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