An Investigation of the Unit Shear Strength of Geometrically Scaled Reinforced Concrete Beams

By Matthew Murray, Santiago Pujol

Version 1.0

License

DOI

10.7277/SVAC-1590

Category

Uncategorized

Published on

Sep 04, 2017

Abstract


image
 

 



This study examines the influence of beam size on the shear capacity of geometrically scaled reinforced concrete beams without web reinforcement. The experimental program included six 12-in. deep beams and two 30-in. deep beams. All components of the large beams were geometrically scaled to have 2.5 times the dimensions of the small beams. The scaling included bar cover, bar spacing, and maximum aggregate size, as well as the overall beam span, width, and depth. Additionally, four of the small beams were cast using aggregate that had not been scaled to study the influence of aggregate size on the unit shear strength of beams of equal size. The specimens, each having a shear span to effective depth ratio of 2.3, were tested to failure under a concentrated load at midspan. The experimental results indicated that when all beam components were geometrically scaled in proportion to depth, beams of different sizes developed similar unit shear strengths, within 20% of one another. The ratio of aggregate size to beam size influenced unit shear strength to the extent that 12-in. deep beams containing 1-in. maximum aggregate size exhibited a unit shear strength that was 35% greater than the unit strength of specimens containing 1/2-in. aggregate.

Cite this work

  • Matthew Murray, Santiago Pujol (2017), "An Investigation of the Unit Shear Strength of Geometrically Scaled Reinforced Concrete Beams," https://datacenterhub.org/deedsdv/publications/view/272.

Keywords

reinforced concrete beams, size effect, aggregate interlock, scaling effects, shear strength