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Détail de l'auteur
Auteur G. Daniel Williams
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
Affiner la rechercheResponse of reinforced concrete bridge columns subjected to blast loads / G. Daniel Williams in Journal of structural engineering, Vol. 137 N° 9 (Septembre 2011)
[article]
in Journal of structural engineering > Vol. 137 N° 9 (Septembre 2011) . - pp. 903-913
Titre : Response of reinforced concrete bridge columns subjected to blast loads Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : G. Daniel Williams, Auteur ; Williamson, Eric B., Auteur Année de publication : 2011 Article en page(s) : pp. 903-913 Note générale : Génie Civil Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Blast loads Bridges Computational modeling Terrorism Index. décimale : 624 Constructions du génie civil et du bâtiment. Infrastructures. Ouvrages en terres. Fondations. Tunnels. Ponts et charpentes Résumé : The vast majority of past research on blast-resistant structural design focuses on buildings, with limited attention directed specifically towards bridges. Although many of the same principles apply, bridges pose unique challenges that are not often encountered when designing buildings for blast resistance. Specifically, establishing standoff with bridges is difficult because they are intended to provide open access to the traveling public, and structural components are directly loaded rather than having loads transferred to them through a facade system. Thus, relative to buildings, bridge components may be exposed to large blast threats that can be in close proximity to the potential target. To address these unique challenges, experimental and computational research was carried out, through support from the National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP), to understand the behavior of blast-loaded concrete bridge members. Although spalling of concrete cover off the back of reinforced concrete walls subjected to blast loads is a well-understood phenomenon, specimens experimentally tested for the current research exhibited spalling of side-cover concrete, which previously has not been reported in the research literature. Using detailed finite-element models, this paper explains the cross-sectional response mechanisms that cause spalling of side-cover concrete in blast-loaded slender reinforced concrete members by numerically reproducing the behavior observed during the experimental testing program.
DEWEY : 624.17 ISSN : 0733-9445 En ligne : http://ascelibrary.org/sto/resource/1/jsendh/v137/i9/p903_s1?bypassSSO=1 [article] Response of reinforced concrete bridge columns subjected to blast loads [texte imprimé] / G. Daniel Williams, Auteur ; Williamson, Eric B., Auteur . - 2011 . - pp. 903-913.
Génie Civil
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Journal of structural engineering > Vol. 137 N° 9 (Septembre 2011) . - pp. 903-913
Mots-clés : Blast loads Bridges Computational modeling Terrorism Index. décimale : 624 Constructions du génie civil et du bâtiment. Infrastructures. Ouvrages en terres. Fondations. Tunnels. Ponts et charpentes Résumé : The vast majority of past research on blast-resistant structural design focuses on buildings, with limited attention directed specifically towards bridges. Although many of the same principles apply, bridges pose unique challenges that are not often encountered when designing buildings for blast resistance. Specifically, establishing standoff with bridges is difficult because they are intended to provide open access to the traveling public, and structural components are directly loaded rather than having loads transferred to them through a facade system. Thus, relative to buildings, bridge components may be exposed to large blast threats that can be in close proximity to the potential target. To address these unique challenges, experimental and computational research was carried out, through support from the National Cooperative Highway Research Program (NCHRP), to understand the behavior of blast-loaded concrete bridge members. Although spalling of concrete cover off the back of reinforced concrete walls subjected to blast loads is a well-understood phenomenon, specimens experimentally tested for the current research exhibited spalling of side-cover concrete, which previously has not been reported in the research literature. Using detailed finite-element models, this paper explains the cross-sectional response mechanisms that cause spalling of side-cover concrete in blast-loaded slender reinforced concrete members by numerically reproducing the behavior observed during the experimental testing program.
DEWEY : 624.17 ISSN : 0733-9445 En ligne : http://ascelibrary.org/sto/resource/1/jsendh/v137/i9/p903_s1?bypassSSO=1