Prestressed PCBT Girders Made Continuous and Composite with a Cast-in-place Deck and Diaphragm

<p> This research document focuses on prestressed PCBT girders made composite with a cast-in-place concrete deck and continuous over several spans through the use of continuity diaphragms. The current design procedure in AASHTO states that a continuity diaphragm is considered to be fully eff...

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Main Author: Koch, Stephanie
Other Authors: Civil Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/32114
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05022008-144755/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-321142021-10-30T05:31:30Z Prestressed PCBT Girders Made Continuous and Composite with a Cast-in-place Deck and Diaphragm Koch, Stephanie Civil Engineering Roberts-Wollmann, Carin L. Cousins, Thomas E. Sotelino, Elisa D. Restraint Moment PCA Method Diaphragm PCBT Girders <p> This research document focuses on prestressed PCBT girders made composite with a cast-in-place concrete deck and continuous over several spans through the use of continuity diaphragms. The current design procedure in AASHTO states that a continuity diaphragm is considered to be fully effective if a compressive stress develops in the bottom of the diaphragm when the superimposed permanent load, settlement, creep, shrinkage, 50 percent live load, and temperature gradient are summed, or if the girders are stored at least 90 days when continuity is established. It is more economical to store girders for fewer days, so it is important to know the minimum number of days that girders must be stored to satisfy AASHTO requirements. <p> In 2005, Charles Newhouse developed the positive moment diaphragm reinforcement detail that is currently being adopted by VDOT. This thesis concludes that Newhouseâ s detail, four No. 6 bars bent 180° and extended into the diaphragm, is adequate for all girders except for the PCBT-77, PCBT-85, and the PCBT-93 when the girders are stored for a minimum of 90 days. It is recommended that two additional bent strands be extended into the continuity diaphragm for these three girder sizes. <p> It was also concluded that about half of the cases result in a significant reduction in the minimum number of storage days if the designer is willing to perform a detailed analysis. The other half of the cases must be stored for 90 days because the total moment in the diaphragm will never become negative and satisfy the AASHTO requirement. In general, narrower girder spacing and higher concrete compressive strength results in shorter required storage duration. The PCA Method was used in this analysis with the updated AASHTO LRFD creep, shrinkage, and prestress loss models. A recommended quick check is to sum the thermal, composite dead load, and half of the live load restraint moments. The girder must be stored 90 days if that sum is positive, and a more detailed time-dependent analysis would result in a shorter than 90 day storage period if that sum is negative. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:34:48Z 2014-03-14T20:34:48Z 2008-04-22 2008-05-02 2008-05-14 2008-05-14 Thesis etd-05022008-144755 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/32114 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05022008-144755/ Stephanie_Koch_Thesis.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Restraint Moment
PCA Method
Diaphragm
PCBT Girders
spellingShingle Restraint Moment
PCA Method
Diaphragm
PCBT Girders
Koch, Stephanie
Prestressed PCBT Girders Made Continuous and Composite with a Cast-in-place Deck and Diaphragm
description <p> This research document focuses on prestressed PCBT girders made composite with a cast-in-place concrete deck and continuous over several spans through the use of continuity diaphragms. The current design procedure in AASHTO states that a continuity diaphragm is considered to be fully effective if a compressive stress develops in the bottom of the diaphragm when the superimposed permanent load, settlement, creep, shrinkage, 50 percent live load, and temperature gradient are summed, or if the girders are stored at least 90 days when continuity is established. It is more economical to store girders for fewer days, so it is important to know the minimum number of days that girders must be stored to satisfy AASHTO requirements. <p> In 2005, Charles Newhouse developed the positive moment diaphragm reinforcement detail that is currently being adopted by VDOT. This thesis concludes that Newhouseâ s detail, four No. 6 bars bent 180° and extended into the diaphragm, is adequate for all girders except for the PCBT-77, PCBT-85, and the PCBT-93 when the girders are stored for a minimum of 90 days. It is recommended that two additional bent strands be extended into the continuity diaphragm for these three girder sizes. <p> It was also concluded that about half of the cases result in a significant reduction in the minimum number of storage days if the designer is willing to perform a detailed analysis. The other half of the cases must be stored for 90 days because the total moment in the diaphragm will never become negative and satisfy the AASHTO requirement. In general, narrower girder spacing and higher concrete compressive strength results in shorter required storage duration. The PCA Method was used in this analysis with the updated AASHTO LRFD creep, shrinkage, and prestress loss models. A recommended quick check is to sum the thermal, composite dead load, and half of the live load restraint moments. The girder must be stored 90 days if that sum is positive, and a more detailed time-dependent analysis would result in a shorter than 90 day storage period if that sum is negative. === Master of Science
author2 Civil Engineering
author_facet Civil Engineering
Koch, Stephanie
author Koch, Stephanie
author_sort Koch, Stephanie
title Prestressed PCBT Girders Made Continuous and Composite with a Cast-in-place Deck and Diaphragm
title_short Prestressed PCBT Girders Made Continuous and Composite with a Cast-in-place Deck and Diaphragm
title_full Prestressed PCBT Girders Made Continuous and Composite with a Cast-in-place Deck and Diaphragm
title_fullStr Prestressed PCBT Girders Made Continuous and Composite with a Cast-in-place Deck and Diaphragm
title_full_unstemmed Prestressed PCBT Girders Made Continuous and Composite with a Cast-in-place Deck and Diaphragm
title_sort prestressed pcbt girders made continuous and composite with a cast-in-place deck and diaphragm
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/32114
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-05022008-144755/
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