Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
260227 Construction and Building Materials 2011 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Experimental tests conducted on 27 square cementitious slabs of 490 × 490 mm simply supported on four edges and subjected to patch load are presented. The slabs had a clear span of 400 × 400 mm and provided with a 445 × 445 mm closed frame of 8 mm diameter steel bar to hold the reinforcement in place and to act as a line support. The test variables were the wire mesh volume fraction: four expanded and two square types; slab thickness: 40, 45, 50 and 60 mm; and the patch load pattern: square and rectangular. The test results showed that as the volume fraction increased the punching strength of the slabs was also increased. Adding a wire mesh to ordinary reinforcement increases significantly the punching resistance at column stub. Moreover, as the loaded area size increases both ductility and stiffness increases and the bridging effect due to the difference in the reinforcement ratio in orthogonal directions was clearly noticed. More research was needed to identify the volume fraction ratio at which the mode of failure alter from flexure to punching.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Civil and Structural Engineering
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