PSI - Issue 37
Jamal A. Abdalla et al. / Procedia Structural Integrity 37 (2022) 660–667 Abdalla et al./ Structural Integrity Procedia 00 (2019) 000 – 000
662
3
170
75
75
10
10
200
200
95
80
170 170
135 135
300
300
150 mm CFRP strip penetration
150 mm CFRP strip penetration
10
60
(a)
(b)
Fig. 1. Specimen strengthening (a) four strips; (b) eight strips.
3. Experimental Program and Results The experimental results obtained in this study are summarized in Table 2. It shows the ultimate attained axial load (P u ) with different load eccentricity ratios (0, 0.25, 0.50, 0.75), NSM CFRP strips and number of CFRP wraps (0, 2, 4, 8). T he corresponding ultimate axial deformation (δ u ), axial deformation at failure (δ f ), ultimate lateral deflection (Δ u ),and lateral deflect ion at failure (Δ f ), among other experimental data are provided in the published experimental paper by the authors (Abokwiek et al. 2021). Several ductility indices were calculated based on these experimental measurements. The unstrengthened specimens in each subgroup were used as control specimens for their subgroup and each has been used as a benchmark to measure the performance of other specimens within or outside the subgroup. It is observed that concrete confinement with CFRP wraps increases the axial load capacity of the specimens when the load is concentrically applied. In addition, confinement with CFRP wraps and the use of CFRP strips increases the flexural capacity of the specimens, however, the increase in eccentricity ratio decreases the flexural capacity.
Table 2 Experimentally measured axial load capacity (Abokwiek et al. 2021) P Exp (kN) Eccentricity Ratio e x / b x =0.0 e x / b x =0.25
e x / b x =0.50 P 0.50 (kN)
e x / b x =0.75 P 0.75 (kN)
P 0.0 (kN)
P 0.25 (kN)
No. of CFRP strips and wraps
0S0W (no Strip, no Wrap) 4S2W (4 Strips, 2 Wraps) 4S4W (4 Strips, 4 Wraps) 4S8W (4 Strips, 8 Wraps)
1117
546
272
182
1520
902
474
290
1667
891
423
316
-
808
531
348
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