Gishin1
Structural
- Jun 24, 2019
- 38
Hi there
Has anyone ever specified, seen, or heard of projects utilising diagonally reinforced concrete coupling beams in Australia? I know there is no recommendation or advice for it in AS3600, and my own experience (and from what I've seen others doing) is design & detailing of coupling beams as standard beams; longitudinal bars and closed ties.
I'm wondering if we will see more of a necessity for this design approach due to the shear over-strength now explicitly required in AS3600-2018. From what I've seen, a large portion of RC buildings in Australia have either a)not been designed for seismic at all, or b) no consideration of shear over-strength, therefore shear loads not being too large to deal with.
Given that the latest 2018 Seismic code increased SEQ loads by 60% (0.05 to 0.08 hazard factor), and AS3600 require shear be increased by x2 - x2.6, I wonder if conventionally detailed coupling beams are the right approach.
I have seen papers saying things along the lines of 'deep lintels to be designed using strut & tie', but no details are ever given, and I would think that the strut and tie approach would result in the diagonal reinforcement.
From what i've seen and heard, I doubt the industry would accept diagonal reinforcement, deeming it too difficult, time consuming, and costly to implement.
Has anyone ever specified, seen, or heard of projects utilising diagonally reinforced concrete coupling beams in Australia? I know there is no recommendation or advice for it in AS3600, and my own experience (and from what I've seen others doing) is design & detailing of coupling beams as standard beams; longitudinal bars and closed ties.
I'm wondering if we will see more of a necessity for this design approach due to the shear over-strength now explicitly required in AS3600-2018. From what I've seen, a large portion of RC buildings in Australia have either a)not been designed for seismic at all, or b) no consideration of shear over-strength, therefore shear loads not being too large to deal with.
Given that the latest 2018 Seismic code increased SEQ loads by 60% (0.05 to 0.08 hazard factor), and AS3600 require shear be increased by x2 - x2.6, I wonder if conventionally detailed coupling beams are the right approach.
I have seen papers saying things along the lines of 'deep lintels to be designed using strut & tie', but no details are ever given, and I would think that the strut and tie approach would result in the diagonal reinforcement.
From what i've seen and heard, I doubt the industry would accept diagonal reinforcement, deeming it too difficult, time consuming, and costly to implement.