7 resultados para FILLED TUBE COLUMNS
em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
The increasing use of Fiber Reinforced methods for strengthening existing brick masonry walls and columns, especially for the rehabilitation of historical buildings, has generated considerable research interest in understanding the failure mechanism in such systems. This dissertation is aimed to provide a basic understanding of the behavior of solid brick masonry walls unwrapped and wrapped with Fiber Reinforced Cementitious Matrix Composites. This is a new type of composite material, commonly known as FRCM, featuring a cementitious inorganic matrix (binder) instead of the more common epoxy one. The influence of the FRCM-reinforcement on the load-carrying capacity and strain distribution during compression test will be investigated using a full-field optical technique known as Digital Image Correlation. Compression test were carried on 6 clay bricks columns and on 7 clay brick walls in three different configuration, casted using bricks scaled respect the first one with a ratio 1:2, in order to determinate the effects of FRCM reinforcement. The goal of the experimental program is to understand how the behavior of brick masonry will be improved by the FRCM-wrapping. The results indicate that there is an arching action zone represented in the form of a parabola with a varying shape according to the used configuration. The area under the parabolas is considered as ineffectively confined. The effectively confined area is assumed to occur within the region where the arching action had been fully developed.
Resumo:
It is well recognized that the technique of strengthening reinforced concrete (RC) using fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP) jackets is more effective for circular sections, but less effective for rectangular sections. Indeed the presence of angular corners does not permit a uniform confinement to be provided by the FRP jackets to the columns. While rounded corners can enhance the effectiveness of FRP confinement, it will be more efficient to modify the rectangular section into an elliptical section. In addition to the better confinement effectiveness, from an aesthetical point of view, the shape modification would be a surprise to the built environment. This paper presents an experimental study on the behavior of FRP-confined concrete columns with elliptical section. Thirty-two short columns, divided in eight batches, were tested under axial compression. Each batch presents four specimens with different elliptical sections, determined by the aspect ratio a/b, that is the ratio between the minor and mayor axis. By varying this value from 1.0 to 2.0 (1.0, 1.3., 1.7, 2.0), the section becomes more and more elliptical starting from a circular shape. In this way it is possible to study the trend of effectiveness of FRP confinement for different section geometries. It is also interesting to study how the confinement effectiveness may vary by changing the cylinder strength of concrete and the number of the layers of CFRP. For this reason, a cylinder strength of concrete of 25 and 45 MPa have been used for the present research work, and half of the specimens were wrapped by one layer of CFRP, while the remaining specimens were wrapped with two layers. A simple analysis of the results has been carried out for evaluating the experimental work described in the present document. Further studies and analysis on this work should help to achieve a new and more accurate stress-strain model for CFRP-confined concrete columns with an elliptical section.
Resumo:
This study wants to analyze the effectiveness of different reinforcement typologies for masonry columns, in particular Fiber-Reinforced Polymer (FRP) and FRCM. The behavior of 10 solid – brick columns that are externally wrapped by FRP sheets and 2 unreinforced columns are presented in this study. The specimens are subjected to axial load until failure occurs. Three different confinement schemes were experimentally analyzed in order to evaluate and compare the effectiveness of the proposed strengthening techniques: 1) Grid carbon FRP (CFRP_G); 2) Grid glass FRP (GFRP_G); 3) Uniaxial carbon FRP (CFRP_U). Two different configurations of the reinforcing system were investigated: FRP sheets are applied as external reinforcement along the perimeter of the masonry columns in the form of continuous and discontinuous wrap, respectively. The results, compared with those for un-reinforced columns, indicate an increases in ultimate load, stiffness and ductility.
Resumo:
The increase of railways near the urban areas is a significant cause of discomfort for inhabitants due to train-induced vibration and noise. Vibration characteristics can vary widely according to the train type: for high-speed trains, if train speed becomes comparable to the ground wave speed, the vibration level becomes significant; for freight trains, due to their heavier weight and lower speed, the vibration amplitudes are greater and propagate at a more considerable distance from the track; for urban tramways, although the vibration amplitude is relatively low, they can have a negative structural effect on the closest buildings [51]. Therefore, to dampen the vibration level, it is possible to carry out some interventions both on the track and the transmission path. This thesis aims to propose and numerically investigate a novel method to dampen the train-induced vibrations along the transmission path. The method is called "resonant filled-trench (RFT)" and consists of a combination of expanded polystyrene (EPS) geofoam to stabilize the trench wall against the collapse and drowned cylindrical embedded inclusions inside the geofoam, which act as a resonator, reflector, and attenuator. By means of finite element simulations, we show that up to 50% higher attenuation than the open trench is achievable after overcoming the resonance frequency of the inclusion, i.e., 35Hz, which covers the frequency contents of the train-induced vibration. Moreover, depending on the filling material used for the inclusions, trench depth can be reduced up to 17% compared to the open trench showing the same screening performance as the open trench. Also, an RFT with DS inclusion installed in dense sand soil shows a high hindrance performance (i.e., IL≥6dB) when the trench depth is larger than 0.5λ_R while it is 0.6λ_R for the open trench.
Resumo:
In this thesis work, a cosmic-ray telescope was set up in the INFN laboratories in Bologna using smaller size replicas of CMS Drift Tubes chambers, called MiniDTs, to test and develop new electronics for the CMS Phase-2 upgrade. The MiniDTs were assembled in INFN National Laboratory in Legnaro, Italy. Scintillator tiles complete the telescope, providing a signal independent of the MiniDTs for offline analysis. The telescope readout is a test system for the CMS Phase-2 upgrade data acquisition design. The readout is based on the early prototype of a radiation-hard FPGA-based board developed for the High Luminosity LHC CMS upgrade, called On Board electronics for Drift Tubes. Once the set-up was operational, we developed an online monitor to display in real-time the most important observables to check the quality of the data acquisition. We performed an offline analysis of the collected data using a custom version of CMS software tools, which allowed us to estimate the time pedestal and drift velocity in each chamber, evaluate the efficiency of the different DT cells, and measure the space and time resolution of the telescope system.
Resumo:
This thesis addresses various aspects related to silos, from the strength of some structural parts to internal actions due to grain. Two hopper silo models were mainly studied, so the thesis is divided into two parts. The first part focuses only on the silo cylinder and deals with the collapse of a silo due to failure of the vertical walls. We had the opportunity to access data from a real silo and perform tensile tests on corrugated sheets. The theoretical and experimental resistance of the corrugated sheet forming the silo cylinder was studied. The resistance was then compared with the internal actions due to grain prescribed by various standards. The second part, however, focused on the hopper of a silo in which a load test (loading and unloading of the silo) was performed. Through the test data, an attempt was made to reproduce the pressures normal to the hopper through analytical reasoning. The experimental pressures were then compared with the theoretical pressures predicted by the standards. In addition, with mathematical reasoning, an attempt was made to reproduce the horizontal pressure on the vertical walls of the silo from the experimental normal pressure in the hopper. In fact, the test was related only to the hopper part and not to the silo cylinder.