Repair of Buildings & Bridges
with Composites
Center for Infrastructure
Engineering Studies
Missouri University of Science and Technology
223 Engineering Research Lab
500 W. 16th St.
Rolla, Missouri 65409
Phone: 573.341.4497
Fax: 573.341.6215
| The worldwide engineering community has identified failures of URM walls as
one of the major causes of material damage and loss of human life due to
seismic events. Therefore, the development of effective and affordable
retrofitting techniques for masonry members is an urgent need. Fiber Reinforced
Polymer (FRP) composites provide solutions for the strengthening of URM walls
subjected to in-plane and out-ofplane overstresses caused by high wind
pressures or earthquake loads. The presented research, part of the effective
collaboration between the Department of Construction and Transportation (DCT)
of University of Padua (Italy) and the Center for Infrastructure Engineering
Studies (CIES) of University of Missouri-Rolla (U.S.A.), deals with the
mechanical behavior of masonry walls strengthened with FRP composites with the
technique NSM and subjected to out-of-plane and in-plane loading. Two series of
walls were tested for this research study. The first series studied the
behavior of masonry wallettes under out-of-plane loads; the second series
analyzed the performance in terms of shear capacity of masonry panels. FRP
composites in the form of rectangular and circular cross section bars were used
as strengthening materials. The results showed that both flexural and shear
capacity of masonry walls can be notably increased by strengthening with FRP
composites.
Analytical models to predict the behavior of strengthened walls, as well as provisional guidelines to design the FRP strengthening for shear and flexure are also presented. Finally, conclusions are provided and future research needs on the area of masonry strengthening are outlined. |