4.6 Article

Some of the Latest Active Strengthening Techniques for Masonry Buildings: A Critical Analysis

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 12, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma12071151

Keywords

retrofitting; earthquakes; masonry; historical buildings; active reinforcement; Mohr's circles; CAM system; phi system

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The present paper deals with the retrofitting of unreinforced masonry (URM) buildings, subjected to in-plane shear and out of-plane loading when struck by an earthquake. After an introductive comparison between some of the latest punctual and continuous active retrofitting methods, the authors focused on the two most effective active continuous techniques, the CAM (Active Confinement of Masonry) system and the phi system, which also improve the box-type behavior of buildings. These two retrofitting systems allow increasing both the static and dynamic load-bearing capacity of masonry buildings. Nevertheless, information on how they actually modify the stress field in static conditions is lacking and sometimes questionable in the literature. Therefore, the authors performed a static analysis in the plane of Mohr/Coulomb, with the dual intent to clarify which of the two is preferable under static conditions and whether the models currently used to design the retrofitting systems are fully adequate.

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