Assessment of the shear strength of continuous reinforced concrete haunched beams based upon cyclic testing

Research results, interpretations and findings of the testing of five prototype continuous reinforced concrete beams (four haunched and one prismatic) designed to develop a shear failure under cyclic loading are presented. Subject beams were tested with minimum shear reinforcement according to the r...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of Building Engineering Vol. 11; pp. 187 - 204
Main Authors Tena-Colunga, Arturo, Urbina-Californias, Luis Angel, Archundia-Aranda, Hans I.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.05.2017
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Summary:Research results, interpretations and findings of the testing of five prototype continuous reinforced concrete beams (four haunched and one prismatic) designed to develop a shear failure under cyclic loading are presented. Subject beams were tested with minimum shear reinforcement according to the reinforced concrete guidelines of Mexico´s Federal District Code. The studied haunched length is one-third the effective span of the beam. The considered angles of slope of haunch from horizontal varied from 0° (prismatic) to 10°. Cyclic tests were displacement-controlled, and two cycles at the same displacement were set in the displacement history which considers a geometrical increment of target displacements. The parameters under study with respect to the shear-resisting mechanism are: (a) the angle of haunch from horizontal and its impact on the beams´ behavior, (b) the contribution of the inclined longitudinal steel reinforcement in shear, (c) the contribution of the transverse steel reinforcement in shear and, d) the angle of inclination of the main shear crack. Previously proposed design equations based upon the section approach were examined. It was found that haunched beams resist a similar or even higher effective shear force when compared to the reference prismatic beams, particularly for negative bending and as the haunched angle increases. The additional shear strength in haunched beams at a smaller volume of concrete is due to higher contributions of the inclined longitudinal steel reinforcement and the transverse steel shear reinforcement as the haunched angle increases. This fact is a direct consequence that the angle of inclination of the main shear crack diminishes as the haunched angle increases. •Perhaps the first cyclic testing ever conducted in continuous RCHBs failing in shear.•Steel shear reinforcement carries more shear as the haunched angle increases.•The angle of inclination of the main shear crack diminishes as the haunched angle increases.•The contribution of stirrups is higher in continuous beams when compared to simply-supported beams.•Equations proposed to assess the shear strength of RCHBs were validated.
ISSN:2352-7102
2352-7102
DOI:10.1016/j.jobe.2017.04.018