Case study to determine the camber of post- tensioned 'I' beam

A common problem that most contractors faced in beam bridge construction was to predict the actual camber of pre-tensioned or post-tensioned beams due to prestressing in order to achieve bridge design finished levels without any unforeseen additional construction cost. Four numbers of full scale 36m...

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Main Author: Lee, Poh Huat
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2005
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/4589/1/LeePohHuatMFKA2005.pdf
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spelling my.utm.45892018-02-28T06:41:36Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/4589/ Case study to determine the camber of post- tensioned 'I' beam Lee, Poh Huat TG Bridge engineering A common problem that most contractors faced in beam bridge construction was to predict the actual camber of pre-tensioned or post-tensioned beams due to prestressing in order to achieve bridge design finished levels without any unforeseen additional construction cost. Four numbers of full scale 36m long post-tensioned “I� beam with overall height of 1.98m was used to measure the actual beam camber on site by means of checking the differences of beam’s top levels while design estimation carried out is based on design code of practice for structural use of concrete BS 8110 by taken into consideration initial prestress losses due to friction and anchorage draw-in of tendons. Comparison between these two methods of evaluation reveals a significant difference. The results shows actual beam cambers measured on site are much larger compare to design prediction. The immediate camber occurred after prestressing is greater by 10.8% and continue to increase to 54.5% over 15 days with a sharp increase focused on the first 3 days after prestressing. From the findings, it’s therefore concluded that deflection of posttensioned beam cannot be predicted accurately due to many field factors which may possibly influence loss of prestress force in post-tensioned cables and behaviour of beam cambering process. However, design calculation can be used as an approximate estimation or as a guide for construction purposes Case study to determine the camber of post- tensioned 'I' beam. 2005-03 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/4589/1/LeePohHuatMFKA2005.pdf Lee, Poh Huat (2005) Case study to determine the camber of post- tensioned 'I' beam. Masters thesis, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Faculty of Civil Engineering.
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
language English
topic TG Bridge engineering
spellingShingle TG Bridge engineering
Lee, Poh Huat
Case study to determine the camber of post- tensioned 'I' beam
description A common problem that most contractors faced in beam bridge construction was to predict the actual camber of pre-tensioned or post-tensioned beams due to prestressing in order to achieve bridge design finished levels without any unforeseen additional construction cost. Four numbers of full scale 36m long post-tensioned “I� beam with overall height of 1.98m was used to measure the actual beam camber on site by means of checking the differences of beam’s top levels while design estimation carried out is based on design code of practice for structural use of concrete BS 8110 by taken into consideration initial prestress losses due to friction and anchorage draw-in of tendons. Comparison between these two methods of evaluation reveals a significant difference. The results shows actual beam cambers measured on site are much larger compare to design prediction. The immediate camber occurred after prestressing is greater by 10.8% and continue to increase to 54.5% over 15 days with a sharp increase focused on the first 3 days after prestressing. From the findings, it’s therefore concluded that deflection of posttensioned beam cannot be predicted accurately due to many field factors which may possibly influence loss of prestress force in post-tensioned cables and behaviour of beam cambering process. However, design calculation can be used as an approximate estimation or as a guide for construction purposes Case study to determine the camber of post- tensioned 'I' beam.
format Thesis
author Lee, Poh Huat
author_facet Lee, Poh Huat
author_sort Lee, Poh Huat
title Case study to determine the camber of post- tensioned 'I' beam
title_short Case study to determine the camber of post- tensioned 'I' beam
title_full Case study to determine the camber of post- tensioned 'I' beam
title_fullStr Case study to determine the camber of post- tensioned 'I' beam
title_full_unstemmed Case study to determine the camber of post- tensioned 'I' beam
title_sort case study to determine the camber of post- tensioned 'i' beam
publishDate 2005
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/4589/1/LeePohHuatMFKA2005.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/4589/
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score 13.209306