Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/9986
Title: The effect of the number of response cycles on the behaviour of reinforced concrete elements subject to cyclic loading
Author: Borg, R. C.
Rossetto, T.
Varum, H.
Keywords: Low-cycle fatigue tests
Loading history
Seismic assessment
Reinforced concrete structures
Issue Date: 2012
Abstract: The development of damage in reinforced concrete (RC) structures is a cumulative process. Some damage indices used to quantify damage make use of the number of response cycles as an Engineering Demand Parameter (EDP) relating with damage development. Other indices make use of deformation in terms of displacement or chord rotation. These functions are generally a function of whether the response is monotonic or cyclic, and are insensitive to the number of major deflection cycles leading to that state of damage. Many such relations are derived from experimental data from low-cycle fatigue tests performed on RC elements. The loading in such tests generally consists of either a monotonic increase in load or a gradually increasing cyclic load. Since damage development is a cumulative process, and hence depends on the load history, the loading pattern in low-cycle fatigue tests for assessment purposes should reflect the response of an earthquake. This paper will discuss a procedure to determine a loading history for cyclic tests, based on earthquake demands. The preliminary results of a campaign of low-cycle fatigue tests on RC elements to investigate the effect of using different load histories are also discussed.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/9986
Publisher Version: http://www.coming.pt/15wcee/index.html
Appears in Collections:DECivil - Comunicações

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