2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.firesaf.2005.06.003
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Stress–strain constitutive equations of concrete material at elevated temperatures

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Cited by 168 publications
(94 citation statements)
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References 7 publications
(13 reference statements)
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“…This hypothesis is also present on In concrete, transient creep strain develops irrecoverably during first-time heating of concrete under load, compared to concrete loaded at elevated temperature (Anderberg and Thelandersson, 1976). This strain has to be considered in any fire analysis involving concrete in compression (Khoury et al, 1985), (Li and Purkiss, 2005); any stress analysis of heated concrete which ignores transient creep will provide erroneous results (Schrefler et al, 2002). For instance, the effect of not including transient creep strain in a full stress-strain model can be shown to produce erroneous unsafe results for the behavior of columns heated in three sides, thus inducing a thermal moment, in fire (Purkiss, 1996), although the effect may be exacerbated due to the coexistence of thermal and moment gradient.…”
Section: Mechanical Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This hypothesis is also present on In concrete, transient creep strain develops irrecoverably during first-time heating of concrete under load, compared to concrete loaded at elevated temperature (Anderberg and Thelandersson, 1976). This strain has to be considered in any fire analysis involving concrete in compression (Khoury et al, 1985), (Li and Purkiss, 2005); any stress analysis of heated concrete which ignores transient creep will provide erroneous results (Schrefler et al, 2002). For instance, the effect of not including transient creep strain in a full stress-strain model can be shown to produce erroneous unsafe results for the behavior of columns heated in three sides, thus inducing a thermal moment, in fire (Purkiss, 1996), although the effect may be exacerbated due to the coexistence of thermal and moment gradient.…”
Section: Mechanical Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Basic creep, defined as the strain that develops when only time is changing with all other conditions such as stress and temperature being constant, is generally omitted for the structural calculation of building structures in the fire situation (Li and Purkiss, 2005).…”
Section: Formulation Of the Explicit Transient Creep Eurocode Model Fmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Different parts of deformations are approximated with discrete equations interacting in a new concrete model. This technique is usable to calculate realistically the behaviour of structures (Franssen 2004, Li and Purkiss 2005, Anderberg 2008, especially in the case of restraint and during cooling, which is not possible in EC2. By considering the load history during heating up in several cases an increasing load bearing capacity due to a higher stiffness of concrete may be obtained.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this model, the critical temperature represents the experimentally observed temperature threshold of 100°C above which LITS starts developing significantly [8]. Such a bilinear curve was conceived as a simple and effective alternative to the more complex LITS functions available in the literature, valid for applications involving temperatures up to 250°C [20][21][22]. One notable application case is the assessment of nuclear power plants in the case of partial fault of the cooling system [17].…”
Section: Uniaxial Lits Function For Temperatures Up To 500°cmentioning
confidence: 99%