cwrugrad
Structural
- Aug 16, 2006
- 17
Has anyone else done a strut-and-tie model for a concrete bridge crossbeam (bent cap) under earthquake loads?
Did you use the results in your design of the reinforcing? If not, what did you use for the structural design of the crossbeam for seismic loads?
The column joint-region design recommendations in Priestley & Seible's book "Seismic Design and Retrofit of Bridges" never really made sense to me (seem arbitrary and don't address what happens outside the immediate joint region), so I wanted to see what a strut and tie approach would show.
When I finally got around to doing a strut-and-tie model, for a two-column bridge bent (with 5-girder superstructure) under combined dead loads and seismic loads, I found that I don't like my results.
My boss wanted the crossbeam/bent cap to be an integral two-stage type, with the girders set on top of part 1 of the crossbeam and then part 2 would be cast around the ends of the girders and up to the top of deck to make one big blob of concrete providing moment continuity in both directions.
That made the crossbeam a deep beam, so I followed the AASHTO LRFD recommendation to use the strut-and-tie method.
I wound up with huge forces in the diagonal strut and vertical tie that connect directly to the tension and compression side of each column. The amount of vertical steel supposedly needed for the tie member is more than 1.5 x the total column longitudinal rebar. Given that you can only consider about half the column rebar as effective on the tension side of the column, that means you'd have to provide a tension capacity in the tie member of 3x what the column steel alone provides.
In a way that makes sense, since the crossbeam concrete isn't under the same compressive stress as the column so you don't get the benefit of the interaction diagram. But I didn't expect to need THAT much rebar!
Thoughts, anyone?
Did you use the results in your design of the reinforcing? If not, what did you use for the structural design of the crossbeam for seismic loads?
The column joint-region design recommendations in Priestley & Seible's book "Seismic Design and Retrofit of Bridges" never really made sense to me (seem arbitrary and don't address what happens outside the immediate joint region), so I wanted to see what a strut and tie approach would show.
When I finally got around to doing a strut-and-tie model, for a two-column bridge bent (with 5-girder superstructure) under combined dead loads and seismic loads, I found that I don't like my results.
My boss wanted the crossbeam/bent cap to be an integral two-stage type, with the girders set on top of part 1 of the crossbeam and then part 2 would be cast around the ends of the girders and up to the top of deck to make one big blob of concrete providing moment continuity in both directions.
That made the crossbeam a deep beam, so I followed the AASHTO LRFD recommendation to use the strut-and-tie method.
I wound up with huge forces in the diagonal strut and vertical tie that connect directly to the tension and compression side of each column. The amount of vertical steel supposedly needed for the tie member is more than 1.5 x the total column longitudinal rebar. Given that you can only consider about half the column rebar as effective on the tension side of the column, that means you'd have to provide a tension capacity in the tie member of 3x what the column steel alone provides.
In a way that makes sense, since the crossbeam concrete isn't under the same compressive stress as the column so you don't get the benefit of the interaction diagram. But I didn't expect to need THAT much rebar!
Thoughts, anyone?