Concrete is a stone-like substance obtained by permitting a carefully proportioned mixture of cement, sand and gravel or other aggregate and water to harden in forms of the shape and dimensions of the desired structure.
Since concrete is a brittle material and is strong in compression. It is weak in tension, so
steel is used inside concrete for strengthening and reinforcing the tensile strength of concrete. The steel must have appropriate deformations to provide strong bonds and interlocking of both materials. When surrounded by the hardened concrete mass it forms an integral part of the two materials, known as "Reinforced Concrete".
Advantages and disadvantages of reinforced concrete
1. Flexural Strength of Concrete: Reinforced Concrete is a structural material, is widely used in many types of structures. It is competitive with steel if economically designed and executed.
2. Advantages of reinforced concrete
3. Disadvantages of reinforced concrete
Factors affecting the joint performance of steel and Concrete
Fundamental assumptions for Reinforced Concrete's Behavior
Reinforced concrete's sections are heterogeneous because they are made up of two different materials - steel and concrete. Therefore, proportioning structural members by ultimate stress design is based on the following assumptions:
Structural members must be designed to support specific loads. Loads are those forces for which a structure should be proportioned. Loads that act on the structure can be divided into three categories.
Structural members must always be proportioned to resist loads greater than service or actual loads, in order to provide proper safety against failure. In the strength design method, the member is designed to resist the factored loads which are obtained by multiplying the factored loads with live loads.
Different factors are used for different loadings. As dead loads can be estimated quite accurately, their load factors are smaller than those of live loads, which have a high degree of uncertainty. Several load factor conditions must be considered in the design to compute the maximum and minimum design forces. Reduction factors are used for some combinations of loads to reflect the low probability of their simultaneous occurrences. Now if the ultimate load is denoted by U, according to the ACI code, the ultimate required strength U, shall be the most critical of the following:
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