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Ramos, A.P.; Lcio, V.J.G.

; Repair and Strengthening Methods of Flat Slabs for Punching; International Workshop on 1 Punching Shear Capacity of RC flat Slabs; Royal Institute of Technology; Estocolmo, Junho de 2000.

Repair and Strengthening Methods of Flat Slabs for Punching

Mr. Antnio M. P. Ramos, M.Sc., Ph.D. Student ampr@mail.fct.unl.pt Prof. Vlter J.G. Lcio, Ph.D. lucio@civil.ist.pt Prof. Paul E. Regan, Ph.D., Prof. Emeritus of University of Westminster Instituto Superior Tcnico Avenida Rovisco Pais Lisboa, Portugal

ABSTRACT The present work reports experimental research carried out on repair and strengthening methods of flat slabs for punching. The repair and strengthening methods studied are: strengthening using transversal prestress, repair by substitution of the damaged concrete; and strengthening using steel beams as a column head, connected to the column and to the slab with epoxy resin and mechanical expansion anchors. Four experimental test slabs (AR1 to AR4) were produced and tested: two with transversal prestress, one only repaired and one strengthened with a steel column head. The execution process, its efficiency and design, are discussed. Key words: punching, flat slabs, repair, strengthening

1.

I TRODUCTIO

In flat slabs the load and moments transferred between the slab and the column cause high stresses in the slab, near the column. These stresses produce cracking and may lead to failure. The failure is associated with the formation of a pyramidal plug of concrete which punches through the slab. The punching failure results from the superposition of shear and flexural stresses in the slab, near the column. It is a local and brittle failure mechanism. Nowadays, flats slabs are a common solution for buildings because they are economical, easy and fast to build. The need to study suitable strengthening and/or repairing methods is associated to the increased use of this kind of slab.

There are many reasons to repair and/or strengthen flats slabs (e.g. construction or design errors, poor quality or inadequate materials, overloading and accidents). The repair and/or strengthening method (or methods) to be used in any particular situation depends on technical and economical factors, and may be a complex task. The present work reports the experimental research carried out to study one repair and two strengthening methods for flat slabs under punching.

2.

MATERIALS PROPERTIES

For accessing the concrete strength used to make the specimens, compression tests on cubes of 15x15x15cm3 (fcm,cube) were carried out. The results are showed in Table 1. The reinforcement steel tensile yielding strength is also presented. Table 1 Materials properties
Concrete Slab age (days) PR1 PR2 old new old PR4 new 51 68.3 11 7 10 316 15 700 fcm,cube (MPa) 39.2 38.6 46.0 56.4 63.9 40.9 515 481 377 515 481 T6 704 704 Steel (fsy MPa) T10 487 487 Bolts 412 412 Beams -

PR3

3. 3.1.

STRE GTHE I G USI G TRA SVERSAL PRESTRESS General

This method of strengthening consists of drilling holes through the slab, near the column, and inserting steel bolts which are prestressed against the slab surfaces. This technique was also described and tested, with success, by Ghali et al [1]. Two tests were carried out at the University of Westminster. The specimens were 2000x2000 mm2 and 100 mm thick. They modelled the area near a column of an interior slab panel up to the zero moment lines. The punching load was applied by a hydraulic jack to a 200x200 mm2 area on the bottom of the slab. The test slabs were loaded up to approximately 70 % of the predicted failure load (146 kN). A large amount of flexural cracking was present at that stage. The test slabs were then unloaded and strengthened with eight transversal steel bolts and the bolts were prestressed (5.0 kN each in slab PR1 and 15.0 kN in slab PR2). The steel bolts used in these tests were cut from a 12.7 mm threaded bar. The middle sections of the bolts were machined to a uniform diameter of 9.5 mm.

The position of the strengthening steel bolts can be seen in Figure 2. Finally the test slabs were loaded up to failure.

Figure 1 Test geometry (PR1 and PR2)

Figure 2 Position of the strengthening steel bolts The bottom and top reinforcement consisted of 6 mm rebars every 200 mm and 10 mm rebars every 75 mm, respectively. The average effective depths were 80 mm. The strains in the steel bolts (in the machined area), the vertical displacements at six points and the total applied load at each load stage, were measured during the tests. 3.2. Test results

In slab PR1, the force distribution between the eight bolts was not uniform. During loading the bolts at the middles of the edges were more highly stressed. At a total applied load of 230 kN, the force in the least stressed bolt was only 37 % of the force in the most stressed bolt. This is because the corner bolts were at a greater distance from the column edges than the others. Three bolts yielded at failure.

Test Slab PR1


35 30 Force in the bolt (k ) 25
Bolt 5 Bolt 6 Bolt 8 Bolt 1 Bolt 3 Bolt 2 Bolt 4

20 15 10 5 0 60

Bolt 7

80

100

120

140 160 Applied Force (k )

180

200

220

240

Figure 3 Force evolution in the bolts (Test Slab PR1) In slab PR2 the corner bolts were placed closer to the column. For this reason the force distribution between the eight bolts was more uniform than in the previous model. In test PR2 no bolts yielded at failure.
Test Slab PR2
35 30 Force in the bolt (k ) 25 20 15 10 5 0 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 220 240 260 Applied Force (k )
Bolt 1 Bolt 3 Bolt 5 Bolt 7 Bolt 2 Bolt 4 Bolt 6 Bolt 8

Figure 4 Force evolution in the bolts (Test Slab PR2) In both tests the force in the bolts stayed more or less constant in the first load stages. When the applied load reached the predicted ultimate load of the slab without strengthening, the loads in the bolts increased quickly. In slab PR1 the failure load was 240 kN and the failure surface was internal to the perimeter defined by the strengthening bolts. The slope of the failure surface with the horizontal plane was about 40. In slab PR2 the failure load was 250 kN, the failure surface was external to the perimeter defined by the strengthening bolts and its slope with the horizontal plane was about 28. The comparison between the experimental and the predicted failure loads is shown in Table 2. The measured small eccentricities of the applied load were considered in Pu,eff , which was estimated following the recommendations of the codes, considered. In the quantification of the punching resistance the average material strengths, without partial coefficients, were used.

In slab PR1 the increase of strength, as compared to a slab without bolts, was limited by the resistance of the unreinforced failure surface between the load and the bolts. The resistance increased due to a steeper failure surface than would be normal in punching. For slab PR2 the failure surface inside the bolts would have had a steeper inclination due to the better positioning of the corner bolts and, at the same time, the perimeter outside the bolts was smaller than in PR1. For those reasons the punching failure occurred externally to the perimeter defined by the bolts. The failure was influenced by the imminent bending failure of the slab (PRm,b = 266.5 kN). Table 2 Comparison between experimental and predicted failure loads(slabs PR1 e PR2)
Slab Pu,exp (k )
(1)

Code
BS 8110 [2] EC2 [3]

Pu,eff(k ) 252 276 256 252 259 288 263 259

(2)

PRm(k ) 211 200 170 231 210 198 169 230

(3)

Pu,eff/PRm 1.19 1.38 1.51 1.09 1.23 1.45 1.55 1.13

PR1

240
ACI 318 [4] MC90 [5] BS 8110 [2] EC2 [3]

PR2

250
ACI 318 [4] MC90 [5]

(1)

Pu,exp - experimental failure load; (2) Pu,eff - effective punching load; (3) PRm - theoretical punching strength without bolts

4. 4.1.

REPAIR BY SUBSTITUTIO OF THE DAMAGED CO CRETE General

Test PR3 was made at the Universidade Tcnica de Lisboa. The specimen was 1800x1800 mm2 and 100 mm thick. Otherwise it was identical to PR1 and PR2. The slab was loaded until punching failure occurred at 180 kN (1st phase). After that, the damaged concrete (old concrete) was removed and substituted by a repair concrete (new concrete). The concrete surface was sound and roughened to promote mechanical adhesion between the two concretes. All the dirt, oil, grease, and other bond-inhibiting materials were removed. Prior to pouring the repair concrete, surface was brought to a saturated surface-dry condition. Finally the slab was loaded again until another punching failure occurred at 183 kN. During the tests, the deformations of three points on the slab surface and the applied load were measured. In the first test, the strains in the top reinforcement were also measured.

4.2.

Test results

In the second phase the inclination of the failure surface with the horizontal was smaller than in the first phase and the punching failure occurred through the old concrete and not through the bonding surface of the two concretes. It should be noted that no bonding agent was used. The experimental failure load and the theoretical resistance, according to four codes, are presented in Table 3. Effective punching loads were estimated considering the applied load eccentricities. The BS 8110 upper limit of 40 MPa for the useful concrete strength was neglected. From the results presented in Table 3 it can be seen that the ratios Pu,eff/PRm are higher in phase one than in phase two. The ratio Pu,eff/PRm of 2nd phase is approximately 0.84 of the corresponding value in 1st phase. This value measures the effectiveness of the repair method and can be called the monolithic coefficient. Table 3 Comparison between experimental and predicted failure loads (Slab PR3)
Phase Pu,exp (k ) Code
BS 8110 [2]

Pu,eff(kN) 211 207 218 211 193 211 195 193

PRm(kN) 222 230 185 243 238 273 204 261

Pu,eff/PRm 0.95 0.90 1.18 0.87 0.81 0.77 0.96 0.74

1st phase

EC2 [3]

180
ACI 318 [4] MC90 [5] BS 8110 [2]

2nd phase

EC2 [3]

183
ACI 318 [4] MC90 [5]

5. 5.1.

REPAIR A D STRE GTHE I G WITH STEEL BEAMS General

Test PR4 was made at the Universidade Tcnica de Lisboa. The specimen was 3300x3300 mm2 and 100 mm thick with a column cross section of 200x200 mm2 (Figure 5). The specimen was intended to model an interior panel of a slab up to the lines of maximum span moment. The bottom and top reinforcement used is shown in Figure 6. The average effective depth was 80 mm. The slab was previously taken to failure by eccentric punching. All the damaged concrete was removed and substituted by a repair concrete, as in the test previously described. The slab was strengthened by the addition of steel beams acting as a column head. The steel beams were glued to the column and to the slab bottom surfaces with epoxy resin and connected to the column side faces with steel expansion anchors.

To apply positive moments to the edges of the specimen, and to give zero relative rotations of the opposite slab edges, steel beams were used (Figure 7). The load was applied at 16 points of the slab top surface by means of a steel structure (Figure 5).

Figure 5 Test geometry (Slab PR4)

Bottom Reinforcement

Top reinforcement

Figure 6 Slab reinforcement (Slab PR4) The slab was finally loaded until failure. Eight displacement transducers were used to measure the vertical deflections of the slab surface, and another two measured the horizontal relative displacements between the slab surface and the steel beams. Eight rosettes, with three strain gauges each, were glued to the steel beams at 100 mm from the support, to analyse the evolution of the stresses in the column head. The applied load was measured with four load cells.

Figure 7 Steel structure for the boundary conditions at mid span 5.2. Test results

The yielding of the top reinforcement began at a total applied load of 250 kN. The failure load was 375 kN. A flexural failure occurred instead of a brittle punching failure. In this respect the repair and strengthening operation was successful. The axial stresses and the shear forces in the steel beams were nearly proportional to the applied load. Table 4 - Comparison between experimental and predicted failure loads (Slabl PR4)
Bending Slab Pu,exp (k )
(1)

Interior Control Perimeter Code


BS 8110 [2] EC2 [3]

Exterior Control Perimeter Pu,eff (k )


(5)

PRm,b (k )
(2)

Pu,eff (k ) PRm,int (k )
(3) (4)

PRm,ext (k )
(6)

385 431 393 386

515 (195+320) 512 (192+320) 494 (174+320) 533 (213+320)

378 431 379 379

491 533 582 530

PR4

375

380
ACI 318 [4] MC90 [5]

(1) Pu,exp - experimental failure load; (2) PRm,b - theoretical bending resistance; (3,5)Pu,eff - effective punching load; (4) PRm,int - theoretical punching resistance obtained by adding the slab strength to the shear strength of the steel column head; (6) PRm,ext - theoretical punching resistance considering a control perimeter exterior to the steel column head

A comparison between the experimental and predicted failure loads is shown in Table 4. It can be seen that the experimental failure load (375 kN - flexural failure) is quite similar to the theoretical flexural resistance of the slab. Slipping was observed between the slab bottom surface and the steel beams, so the flexural resistance was calculated by adding the slab and the beam flexural resistance. The theoretical punching resistance is higher than the flexural resistance, and for that reason a flexural failure occurred.

6.

CO CLUSIO S

Two methods of strengthening and one of repair, for flat slabs with punching problems, were described and tests were performed to analyse their efficiency. The repair method analysed consists in replacing the concrete damaged through punching failure by a repair concrete. This technique showed good results. With this method a punching resistance similar to that of the undamaged slab may be obtained if the surface of the old concrete is well prepared, a suitable repair concrete is used and a good curing is performed. The monolithic coefficient was approximately 0.84. One repair and strengthening method was tested. This technique was applied to a slab, which was damaged by punching. The damaged concrete was replaced by a repair concrete and the model was strengthened with a column head of steel beams connected to the column and slab by epoxy resin and steel anchors. This strengthening method shows to be able to develop a good punching resistance, increasing also the bending resistance. A strengthening method useful for cases where the punching failure has not occurred was also studied. This method consists on using prestressed steel bolts through the slab thickness near the column. Two slabs were tested and the achieved punching resistance was higher than those predicted for the concrete slabs alone. With this method it seams that, if the prestress is not enough to force a punching failure surface outside the perimeter of the bolts, the punching resistance of the system may be obtained by adding the resistance of the concrete slab to the prestressing force applied to the bolts.

REFERE CES [1] Ghali, A.; Sargious, M. A.; Huizer, A.: Vertical Prestressing of Flat Plates Around Columns, Shear in Reinforced Concrete, ACI, Special Publication SP 42, 1974, Detroit, Vol. 2, pp. 905-920. [2] British Standards Institution: BS8110 - Structural use of concrete, London, 1985. [3] Norma Portuguesa NP ENV 1992-1-1: Eurocdigo 2: Projecto de Estruturas de Beto Parte 1.1: Regras Gerais e Regras para Edifcios (Eurocode 2 : Design of Concrete Structures - Part 1.1 : General Rules and Rules for Buildings), April, 1998. [4] American Concrete Institute: Building code requirements for reinforced concrete, ACI Committee 318, Detroit, 1995. [5] Comit Euro-International du Bton: CEB-FIP - Model Code 1990, Bulletin dinformation n213/214, May, 1993.

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