Title: Lecture 6 Flexure
1Lecture 6 - Flexure
- September 13, 2002
- CVEN 444
2Lecture Goals
- Basic Concepts
- Rectangular Beams
- Non-uniform beams
- Balanced Beams
3Flexural Stress
Example Consider a simple rectangular beam( b x h
) reinforced with steel reinforcement of As.
Determine the centroid ( neutral axis, NA ) and
moment of inertia Izz of the beam for an ideal
beam (no cracks). Determine the NA and moment of
inertia, Izz, of beam if the beam is cracked and
tensile forces are in the steel only.
(1) (2)
4Example
Ec Modulus of Elasticity - concrete Es
Modulus of Elasticity - steel As Area of
steel d distance to steel b width h height
5Example
Centroid (NA)
Moment of Inertia
6Example (uncracked)
7Example - (cracked)
For a cracked section the concrete is in
compression and steel is in tension. The strain
in the beam is linear.
8Example - (cracked)
Using Equilibrium
9Example - (cracked)
Using Hookes law
10Example - (cracked)
Using a compatibility condition.
Substitute into the first equation.
11Example - (cracked)
Substitute in for the strain relationship.
Rearrange the equation into a quadratic equation.
12Example - (cracked)
Use a ratio of areas of concrete and steel.
Modify the equation to create a non-dimensional
ratio.
13Example - (cracked)
Use the quadratic formula
Solve for the centroid by multiplying the result
by d.
14Example - (cracked)
The moment of inertia using the parallel axis
15Example
For the following example find centroid and
moment of inertia for an uncracked and cracked
section and compare the results.
Es 29000 ksi Ec 3625 ksi d 15.5 in b 12
in. h 18 in. Use 4 7 bars for the steel.
16Example
A 7 bar has an As 0.6 in2
17Example
The uncracked centroid is
18Example
The uncracked moment of inertia
19Example
The cracked centroid is defined by
20Example
The cracked moment of inertia is
21Example
Notice that the centroid changes from 9.47 in. to
5.62 in. and the moment of inertia decreases from
6491 in4 to 2584 in4 . The cracked section loses
more than half of its strength.
22Flexural Stress
Basic Assumptions in Flexure Theory
- Plane sections remain plane ( not true for deep
beams h gt 4b) - The strain in the reinforcement is equal to the
strain in the concrete at the same level, i.e. es
ec at same level. - Stress in concrete reinforcement may be
calculated from the strains using s-e curves for
concrete steel.
23Flexural Stress
Additional Assumptions for design (for
simplification)
- Tensile strength of concrete is neglected for
calculation of flexural strength. - Concrete is assumed to fail in compression, when
ec (concrete strain) ecu (limit state) 0.003 - Compressive s-e relationship for concrete may be
assumed to be any shape that results in an
acceptable prediction of strength.
24Flexural Stress
The concrete may exceed the ec at the outside
edge of the compressive zone.
25Flexural Stress
The compressive force is modeled as Cc k1k3fc
bc at the location x k2c
26Flexural Stress
The compressive coefficients of the stress block
at given for the following shapes. k3 is ratio of
maximum stress at fc in the compressive zone of a
beam to the cylinder strength, fc (0.85 is a
typical value for common concrete)
27Flexural Stress
The compressive zone is modeled with a equivalent
stress block.
28Flexural Stress
The equivalent rectangular concrete stress
distribution has what is known as a b1
coefficient is proportion of average stress
distribution covers.
29Flexural Stress
Requirements for analysis of reinforced concrete
beams
1 Stress-Strain Compatibility Stress at a
point in member must correspond to strain at a
point.
2 Equilibrium Internal forces balances with
external forces
30Flexural Stress
Example of rectangular reinforced concrete beam.
(1) Setup equilibrium.
31Flexural Stress
Example of rectangular reinforced concrete beam.
(2) Find flexural capacity.
32Flexural Stress
Example of rectangular reinforced concrete beam.
(2) Find flexural capacity.
33Flexural Stress
Example of rectangular reinforced concrete beam.
(3) Need to confirm es gt ey
34Flexural Stress Example
Example of rectangular reinforced concrete beam.
Given a rectangular beam fc 4000 psi fy 60
ksi (4 7 bars) b 12 in. d 15.5 in. h 18
in. Find the neutral axis. Find the moment
capacity of the beam.
35Example
Determine the area of steel, 7 bar has 0.6
in2. The b value is b1 0.85 because the
concrete has a fc 4000 psi.
36Example
From equilibrium
The neutral axis is
37Example
Check to see whether or not the steel has yielded.
Check the strain in the steel
Steel yielded!
38Example
Compute moment capacity of the beam.