Bond capacity of severely corroded bars with corroded stirrups
Journal article, 2011

Eccentric pull-out tests were carried out to study the influence of severe corrosion leading to extensive cover cracking, and the effect of corroded and non-corroded stirrups on the anchorage of deformed bars. The specimens were subjected to a low-rate electrochemical corrosion process for three time spans that caused a rebar weight loss up to approximately 20% in the main bars and 35% in the stirrups. Pull-out tests were then carried out in each specimen, on either the two corner bars or the middle bar, to measure the bond capacity. The effects of corrosion and the mechanical testing were simulated with non-linear finite-element analysis. The combination of tests and analyses gives a better understanding of the effect of high corrosion penetrations and the presence of corroded Stirrups on failure modes. The presence of stirrups, corroded and non-corroded, was found to significantly change the behavior of an anchorage region, namely the corrosion-induced crack pattern, the failure mode and the bond capacity.

corroded stirrup

anchorage and bond

finite element analysis

severe corrosion

pull-out test

Author

Kamyab Zandi

Chalmers, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Structural Engineering

Dario Coronelli

Polytechnic University of Milan

Karin Lundgren

Chalmers, Civil and Environmental Engineering, Structural Engineering

Magazine of Concrete Research

0024-9831 (ISSN) 1751763x (eISSN)

Vol. 63 12 953-968

Areas of Advance

Building Futures (2010-2018)

Materials Science

Subject Categories

Civil Engineering

DOI

10.1680/macr.10.00200

More information

Latest update

3/29/2018