Improving behavior of reinforced concrete frames to resist progressive collapse through steel bracings

External installation of steel braces has been proved an effective seismic strengthening or retrofitting scheme to upgrade the lateral load-resisting capacity of reinforced concrete (RC) frames. However, the effectiveness of steel bracing in improving the progressive collapse resistance potential...

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Main Authors: Qian, Kai, Weng, Yun-Hao, Li, Bing
Other Authors: School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144094
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1440942020-10-13T05:08:16Z Improving behavior of reinforced concrete frames to resist progressive collapse through steel bracings Qian, Kai Weng, Yun-Hao Li, Bing School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Engineering::Civil engineering Progressive Collapse Reinforced Concrete External installation of steel braces has been proved an effective seismic strengthening or retrofitting scheme to upgrade the lateral load-resisting capacity of reinforced concrete (RC) frames. However, the effectiveness of steel bracing in improving the progressive collapse resistance potential of RC frames is vague. To fill the gap, five one-quarter-scaled specimens (one bare frame and four braced frames) were tested subject to a pushdown loading regime. The RC frames were nonseismically detailed for reference. Four braced frames with different bracing configurations were tested to evaluate the efficiency of braces for upgrading the load-resisting capacity of RC frames. A rational design method was implemented for designing the braced frames, including the connections between the braces and RC frames. Experimental results proved that steel bracing could increase the first peak load and initial stiffness of the frames significantly. Before mobilization of catenary action in RC frames, the tensile braces were fractured, but the compressive braces experienced severe buckling. Consequently, the braced specimens performed similarly to the bare frame in the catenary action stage. 2020-10-13T05:08:16Z 2020-10-13T05:08:16Z 2018 Journal Article Qian, K., Weng, Y.-H., & Li, B. (2019). Improving behavior of reinforced concrete frames to resist progressive collapse through steel bracings. Journal of Structural Engineering, 145(2), 04018248-. doi:10.1061/(ASCE)ST.1943-541X.0002263 0733-9445 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144094 10.1061/(ASCE)ST.1943-541X.0002263 2 145 en Journal of Structural Engineering © 2018 American Society of Civil Engineers. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Civil engineering
Progressive Collapse
Reinforced Concrete
spellingShingle Engineering::Civil engineering
Progressive Collapse
Reinforced Concrete
Qian, Kai
Weng, Yun-Hao
Li, Bing
Improving behavior of reinforced concrete frames to resist progressive collapse through steel bracings
description External installation of steel braces has been proved an effective seismic strengthening or retrofitting scheme to upgrade the lateral load-resisting capacity of reinforced concrete (RC) frames. However, the effectiveness of steel bracing in improving the progressive collapse resistance potential of RC frames is vague. To fill the gap, five one-quarter-scaled specimens (one bare frame and four braced frames) were tested subject to a pushdown loading regime. The RC frames were nonseismically detailed for reference. Four braced frames with different bracing configurations were tested to evaluate the efficiency of braces for upgrading the load-resisting capacity of RC frames. A rational design method was implemented for designing the braced frames, including the connections between the braces and RC frames. Experimental results proved that steel bracing could increase the first peak load and initial stiffness of the frames significantly. Before mobilization of catenary action in RC frames, the tensile braces were fractured, but the compressive braces experienced severe buckling. Consequently, the braced specimens performed similarly to the bare frame in the catenary action stage.
author2 School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
author_facet School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
Qian, Kai
Weng, Yun-Hao
Li, Bing
format Article
author Qian, Kai
Weng, Yun-Hao
Li, Bing
author_sort Qian, Kai
title Improving behavior of reinforced concrete frames to resist progressive collapse through steel bracings
title_short Improving behavior of reinforced concrete frames to resist progressive collapse through steel bracings
title_full Improving behavior of reinforced concrete frames to resist progressive collapse through steel bracings
title_fullStr Improving behavior of reinforced concrete frames to resist progressive collapse through steel bracings
title_full_unstemmed Improving behavior of reinforced concrete frames to resist progressive collapse through steel bracings
title_sort improving behavior of reinforced concrete frames to resist progressive collapse through steel bracings
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144094
_version_ 1681059133707517952