4.4 Article

Contribution of Shear Reinforcements and Concrete to the Shear Capacity of Interfaces between Concretes Cast at Different Times

Journal

KSCE JOURNAL OF CIVIL ENGINEERING
Volume 25, Issue 6, Pages 2065-2077

Publisher

KOREAN SOCIETY OF CIVIL ENGINEERS-KSCE
DOI: 10.1007/s12205-021-0791-5

Keywords

Cold joint; Shear capacity; Cohesion; High-strength shear reinforcement; Push-off test

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51641807]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Hubei Province [2018CFB664]
  3. Open Research Fund Project of Hubei Key Laboratory of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation (China Three Gorges University) [2018KJZ06]

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The study found that in cold joints, concrete significantly contributes to the shear capacity, while the contribution of shear reinforcements is not as significant as expected. The variation in the yield strength of shear reinforcements has no apparent effect on the shear strength and stiffness of cold joints, whereas increasing the concrete compressive strength significantly enhances the shear capacity of cold joints.
Currently, shear transfer models have diverse assumptions about the contribution of shear reinforcements and concrete to the shear capacity of interfaces between concretes cast at different times (that is, cold joints). Furthermore, the knowledge about the effect of high-strength shear reinforcements (HSSR) having a nominal yield strength exceeding 414 MPa (60 ksi), is still limited. This study aims to determine the extent to which shear reinforcements and concrete contribute to the shear capacity of cold joints and explore the effect of HSSR on shear transfer behavior. To this end, nine cold joint push-off specimens were tested to investigate the effects of yield strength of shear reinforcement (YSSR) and concrete compressive strength (CCS) on the interface shear strength and stiffness. In addition, code provisions evaluation was used to identify the degree of concrete contribution, based on a database of 108 cold joint push-off test results established in this study. Test results indicate that the increase of YSSR (rising from 400 MPa to 600 MPa) has no evident effect on the shear strength and stiffness of cold joints, whereas the increase of CCS can significantly increase them. Moreover, when CCS rises from 20 MPa to 50 MPa, the interface shear capacity of push-off specimens increases by approximately 110%, i.e., from 103.5 kN to 217.5 kN. Hence, concrete has a considerable contribution, whereas the contribution of shear reinforcements is not as great as expected. Code provisions evaluation results also indicate that concrete considerably contributes to the shear capacity in the form of cohesion. On the basis of these findings and current design equations, a shear capacity equation, which accounts for the effect of CCS and the limited participation of shear reinforcements, is proposed. This equation is found to provide reasonable prediction of cold joint shear capacity, especially for the cold joint composed of high-strength concrete.

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