Buildings (Feb 2023)

Prestressed Steel-Concrete Composite I-Beams with Single and Double Corrugated Web

  • Mahmoud T. Nawar,
  • Ayman El-Zohairy,
  • Hassan M. Maaly,
  • Mohammed Husain,
  • Islam Salama,
  • Eslam Mousa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings13030647
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
p. 647

Abstract

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Composite steel girders with concrete have been used for many years and advances in structural and fabrication technology have established their optimization. One of the changes in structural steel I-beams during the past few years has been the availability of web corrugation. The economic design of steel girders normally requires thin webs. Moreover, using externally prestressed tendons as a strengthening technique controls deflections and stresses. However, this strengthening technique causes shear buckling of the steel beams. In this study, the flexural behavior of externally prestressed composite steel-concrete I-beams with a single and double corrugated web was experimentally and numerically investigated. Three simply supported prestressed steel-concrete composite I-beams with single corrugated web (SCW) and double corrugated web (DCW) were tested under four-point loading. The tested beams were externally prestressed by using straight tendons along the full length. The experimental results showed that using SCW was more efficient in shear buckling resistance than DCW with the same equivalent web thickness. The ABAQUAS package was used to simulate the nonlinear behavior of the tested beams. The developed model was validated against the experimental results to carry out a parametric study in order to investigate the effect of various parameters on the behavior of the composite beams with SCW and DCW. Using stiffeners at the loading points as deviators to maintain the prestressed tendon positions increased the beam capacity and improved the beam performance.

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