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Compressive Force-Path Method electronic resource Unified Ultimate Limit-State Design of Concrete Structures / by Michael D Kotsovos.

By: Kotsovos, Michael D [author.]Contributor(s): SpringerLink (Online service)Material type: TextTextSeries: Engineering MaterialsPublication details: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2014Description: XVI, 221 p. 191 illus. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783319004884Subject(s): engineering | Building construction | Materials | Engineering | Building Materials | Structural Materials | Building ConstructionDDC classification: 691 LOC classification: TA401-492Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Reappraisal of concepts underlying reinforced concrete design -- The concept of the compressive-force path -- Modelling of simply-supported beams -- Design of simply supported beams -- Design for punching of flat slabs -- Design of skeletal structures with beam-like elements -- Earthquake-resistant design -- Design examples.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: This book presents a method which simplifies and unifies the design of reinforced concrete (RC) structures and is applicable to any structural element under both normal and seismic loading conditions. The proposed method has a sound theoretical basis and is expressed in a unified form applicable to all structural members, as well as their connections. It is applied in practice through the use of simple failure criteria derived from first principles without the need for calibration through the use of experimental data. The method is capable of predicting not only load-carrying capacity but also the locations and modes of failure, as well as safeguarding the structural performance code requirements. In this book, the concepts underlying the method are first presented for the case of simply supported RC beams. The application of the method is progressively extended so as to cover all common structural elements. For each structural element considered, evidence of the validity of the proposed method is presented together with design examples and comparisons with current code specifications. The method has been found to produce design solutions which satisfy the seismic performance requirements of current codes in all cases investigated to date, including structural members such as beams, columns, and walls, beam-to-beam or column-to-column connections, and beam-to-column joints.
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Reappraisal of concepts underlying reinforced concrete design -- The concept of the compressive-force path -- Modelling of simply-supported beams -- Design of simply supported beams -- Design for punching of flat slabs -- Design of skeletal structures with beam-like elements -- Earthquake-resistant design -- Design examples.

This book presents a method which simplifies and unifies the design of reinforced concrete (RC) structures and is applicable to any structural element under both normal and seismic loading conditions. The proposed method has a sound theoretical basis and is expressed in a unified form applicable to all structural members, as well as their connections. It is applied in practice through the use of simple failure criteria derived from first principles without the need for calibration through the use of experimental data. The method is capable of predicting not only load-carrying capacity but also the locations and modes of failure, as well as safeguarding the structural performance code requirements. In this book, the concepts underlying the method are first presented for the case of simply supported RC beams. The application of the method is progressively extended so as to cover all common structural elements. For each structural element considered, evidence of the validity of the proposed method is presented together with design examples and comparisons with current code specifications. The method has been found to produce design solutions which satisfy the seismic performance requirements of current codes in all cases investigated to date, including structural members such as beams, columns, and walls, beam-to-beam or column-to-column connections, and beam-to-column joints.

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