Failures Due To Shear
Failures Due To Shear
Failures Due To Shear
BY : SAURABH SHAH
CODE : 1710
FACULTY : PROF. R.J.SHAH
Definition:
Shear failure is actually a diagonal tension failure that is brittle in nature and
should be avoided.
To better understand diagonal tension consider the basic mechanics of a
beam with no shear web reinforcing:
Recall from Mohr's circle - an equivalent state of stress different than that
shown above is obtained by rotating the differential element 45°.
This rotated element yields principal tension and compressive stresses which
are occurring simultaneously with the previous maximum fv state of VQ / Ib.
In general this ft will exceed the inherent tensile strength of
masonry, before fv exceeds masonry shear strength.
When this happens, diagonal cracks, originating at the N.A
begin to occur and grow with increases in beam loading.
Contents
Introduction
Shear Transfer Action and Mechanisms
Failure Modes in Shear (Without Web Reinforcement)
Factors affecting Shear
Failure of corbels in shear
Case study
Few pictures of shear failure
Bibliography
INTRODUCTION
• The early use of reinforced concrete was characterized by a large number of
find out the problems in basic shear design from the early days.
• The equations were brought to the codes after many experiments and
combination of
Thus, V = Vc + Vd + Va
As the shear force increases each of the above resistances reach their
existing flexural cracks and propagates into the beam are called flexure
shear cracks.
The contribution of shear reinforcement to the shear strength of a
reinforced concrete beam can be described as follows:
It resists part of the shear, Vs. The stirrup passing across the cracks
It has been shown by Kani (1967) and Taylor(1972) that larger beams are
proportionally weaker in shear than smaller beams; that is , the ultimate
shear stress reduces with beam depth . It is believed that this is because
the aggregate interlock contribution to shear strength Vc, does not
increase in the same proportion as the beam size, Design shear stress
values in BS8110 allow for the influence of the effective depth ,d. The
proportion of the strength that the bonded shear plates contributes is
also likely to change.
Web reinforcement contribution to Shear Strength
Grade of concrete M 20 M 25 M 30 M 35 M 40
and
above
Section dimensions
Loading configuration
Beam types
Failure of corbels in shear
BEHAVIOR OF CORBEL
The followings are the major items show the behaviour of the reinforced
concrete corbel, as follows :
The shear span/depth ratio is less than 1.0, it makes the corbel
behave in two-dimensional manner.
Shear deformation is significant is the corbel.
There is large horizontal force transmitted from the supported beam
result from long-term shrinkage and creep deformation.
Bearing failure due to large concentrated load.
The cracks are usually vertical or inclined pure shear cracks.
The mode of failure of corbel are : yielding of the tension tie, failure of
the end anchorage of the tension tie, failure of concrete by
compression or shearing and bearing failure.
It is very common that corbels are failed in shear.
Failure mechanism in corbels as under.
3. Sliding shear.
4.anchorage splitting.
Two warehouse roofs at Air Force Bases in Ohio and Georgia cracked
and collapsed under combined load, shrinkage, and thermal effects in
1955 and 1956. 122 m (400 ft) lengths of reinforced concrete roof
girders functioned as single units because of defective expansion
joints. Other warehouses, built to the same plans, survived because
separation between adjacent two-hundred-foot bays was maintained
by functioning joints. These failures led to more stringent shear
reinforcing steel requirements in subsequent editions of the ACI
Building Code. In the warehouse structures, the concrete alone, with
no stirrups, was expected to carry the shear forces, and the members
had no shear capacity once they cracked (McKaig 1962, Feld and
Carper, 1997).
At the Wilkins Air Force Depot in Shelby , Ohio , about 370 m2 (4,000
ft2) of the roof collapsed suddenly on August 17, 1955. At the time of
collapse, there were no loads other than the self-weight of the roof
(Feld 1964, p. 25).
Severe cracking had been observed two weeks before the collapse, so
the girder had been supported by temporary shoring. The cracks
occurred about 0.45 m (1 ½ ft) past the end of the cutoff of the top
negative reinforcement over the columns (Feld 1964, pp. 26 – 27). A
typical AMC warehouse frame is shown below.
A second warehouse roof collapse took place at Robins Air Force Base
near Macon , Georgia , early on the morning of September 5, 1956.
This warehouse had been built to the revised design. The revision
added top bars and nominal stirrups, at a volume of about 0.06 %, for
the length of the frames. This collapse included two adjacent girders
and about 560 m2 (6,000 ft2) of the roof. Before the collapse occurred,
cracks in the concrete girders that reached 13 mm (½ in) in width had
been observed. Feld (1964, p. 25) suggests “It seems that the extent of
shrinkage and resulting axial tensions may be somewhat related to the
speed of concreting or to the extent of each separate placement.”
In both cases, the design, materials, and workmanship were up to the
codes and standards of the day. However, the failures had still
occurred. Feld (1964, p 27) believed that “failure took place by a
combination of diagonal tension (shear) due to dead load and axial
tension due to shrinkage and temperature change. Circumstantial
evidence suggested that high friction forces were developed in the
expansion joint consisting of one steel plate sliding on another; some
plates showed no indication of relative displacement since their
installation.” In other words, the expansion joints locked and did not
function to relieve stress.
Building collapsed while under construction at 2000
Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts
On January 25, 1971, two thirds of a 16-story apartment building
collapsed while under construction at 2000 Commonwealth Avenue,
Boston, Massachusetts. Four workers died after a failure on the roof
instigated a progressive collapse all the way to the basement, where the
men were found. Fortunately, the collapse occurred slowly enough for
most of the other workers to run to safety. The surviving workers'
descriptions of the failure provide a textbook definition of punching
shear. Low concrete strength due to inadequate protection against cold
weather contributed to low punching shear strength of the flat slab.
Inspection, quality control, planning, and supervision were for all
practical purposes absent from the project.
The high-rise apartment building was made of cast-in-place reinforced
concrete flat slab construction with a central elevator shaft. was
designed to be sixteen stories with a mechanical room above a five-foot
crawl space on the roof. The structure also had two levels of
underground parking. A swimming pool, ancillary spaces and one
apartment were located on the first floor and one hundred thirty two
apartments were on the second through sixteenth floors.
Construction began on the site late in the fall of 1969. Excavation had
been partially started a few years earlier. Most of the work was
subcontracted to area specialists. Only one representative from the
General Contractor was on site during construction. At the time of
collapse, construction was nearing completion. Brickwork was
completed up to the sixteenth floor and the building was mostly
enclosed from the second to fifteenth floors. Plumbing, heating and
ventilating systems were being installed throughout various parts of
the building. It is estimated that one hundred men were working in or
around the building at the time of failure (Granger et al. 1971).
Punching Shear Failure in the Main Roof at Column E5
The work is stopped for almost 2 months for deciding rectification measure
The top deck again acts as cantilever and fails in moment due to insufficient
lapping of bars
What it taught us?
Bearing
The bearing of bridge attains some fixity and do not transfer moment
by rotation, this leads to shear crack at the junction of bearing.
Failure of column-beam junction due to shear
Failure of column through
shear crack
Direction of shear
forces
Shear failure of
column
Bibliography
Beyond failure- forensic case studies for civil engineers By Norbert J.
Delatte
Construction failure By Jacob Feld- Kenneth L. Carper
Paper by dileep kumar (P.G M.Tech Lecturer, Dept. of Civil Engg. Govt. Engg.
College, Palakkad.
) on “SHEAR STRENGTH OF R.C.C BEAMS
WITHOUT WEB REINFORCEMENT”
www.nptel.iitm.in Shear study by : (Dr. Amlan K Sengupta and Prof.
Devdas Menon)
http://matdl.org/failurecases (Case studies)
http://jan.ucc.nau.edu
Pictures from (www.google.com\images )