Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations cowski on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Utilising Dowel Bar in Compression - Strain Compatibility

Status
Not open for further replies.

willowman

Civil/Environmental
Feb 22, 2020
25
Hi all,

I need to use steel dowel bars in a concrete column to provide additional axial compression capacity. A dowel bar is preferred to reinforcement as it can be made from higher strength steel. The axial force in the column is sufficiently high compared to the bending moment so that there is no tension across the joint between column and beam below.

My question is one of strain compatibility. As I understand, I need to convert the dowel bar area into an equivalent concrete area using the modular ratio i.e. m = Es/Ec. Once I have this equivalent area I can multiply this by the allowable concrete stress and this gives me a new overall axial capacity.

We have to do this conversion because if we simply assumed that the steel dowel accepts a maximum load equal to its cross-sectional area x yield strength then this would ignore the fact that both the steel and concrete have to deform the same amount under load i.e. have compatible strain. We have to have compatible strains because we are assuming that load is transferred from the concrete to the steel dowel bar (which doesn't run the full height of the column)through a bond between the two materials. If the two materials strained at different rates then by inspection they can't be bonded. If they are not bonded then no load is transferred from the concrete to the steel.

Have I understood this correctly?

On a side note, is anyone aware of the Eurocode 2 approach to use of dowel bars or steel reinforcing bar in general being used in compression?

Thanks,
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you


I am not sure i understand your question correctly..

If you are looking for the permissible axial load for short column with lateral ties , ( based on working stress design),

Po = pcc*Ac + psc * Asc


pcc is the permissible compressive stress for the concrete
Ac is the gross cross-sectional area of concrete
pcs is the permissible compressive stress in the reinforcement
Asc is the cross-sectional area of the longitudinal steel.

But this method was used at king George V era and early 60's..

A descriptive sketch may help to get better responds..




Use it up, wear it out;
Make it do, or do without.

NEW ENGLAND MAXIM


 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor