INVESTIGADORES
OLLER  Sergio Horacio Cristobal
artículos
Título:
New methodology for calculating damage variables evolution in Plastic Damage Model for RC structures
Autor/es:
B. ALFARAH; F. LÓPEZ-ALMANSA; S. OLLER
Revista:
ENGINEERING STRUCTURES
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
Referencias:
Lugar: Amsterdam; Año: 2017 vol. 132 p. 70 - 86
ISSN:
0141-0296
Resumen:
The behavior of reinforced concrete (RC) structures under severe demands, as strong ground motions, is highly complex; this is mainly due to joint operation of concrete and steel, with several coupled failure modes. Furthermore, given the increasing awareness and concern for the important seismic worldwide risk, new developments have arisen in earthquake engineering. Nonetheless, simplified numerical modelsare widely used (given their moderate computational cost), and many developments rely mainly on them. The authors have started a long-term research whose final objective is to provide, by using advanced numerical models, solid basis for these developments. Those models are based on continuum mechanics, and consider Plastic Damage Model to simulate concrete behavior. Within this context, this paper presents a new methodology to calculate damage variables evolution; the proposed approach isbased in the Lubliner/Lee/Fenves formulation and provides closed-form expressions of the compressive and tensile damage variables in terms of the corresponding strains. This methodology does not require calibration with experimental results and incorporates a strategy to avoid mesh-sensitivity. A particular algorithm, suitable for implementation in Abaqus, is described. Mesh-insensitivity is validated in a simple tension example. Accuracy and reliability are verified by simulating a cyclic experiment on a plain concrete specimen. Two laboratory experiments consisting in pushing until failure two 2-D RC frames are simulated with the proposed approach to investigate its ability to reproduce actual monotonic behavior of RC structures; the obtained results are also compared with the aforementioned simplified models thatare commonly employed in earthquake engineering