Masonries Structures - Part I
Masonries Structures - Part I
PART 1 2013-2014
MASONRY TYPES
UNREINFORCED/SIMPLE
MASONRY
ZC
(CM)
CONFINED MASONRY
ZC+AR
(CM+RH)
Masonry composed of two layers of masonry parallel with an inbetween reinforced grout space, with or without mechanical bond
between layers and with the three components working together to
retrieve all types of requests.
ZNA
(URM)
ZIA
(RCM)
ZIC
(IM)
INFILL MASONRY
Wall intended to resist against the horizontal and vertical forces acting essentially in its plane.
CR6-2014: Masonry walls that meet the minimum geometric data from paragraph 5.2. who continued to the
foundation and erected from materials referred to Chap. 3 and 4 are "structural walls" and will be calculated
and composed according to the provisions of this CODE.
MASONRY BRACING
STRUCTURAL WALL
Perpendicular wall to another structural wall, which is working on taking vertical and horizontal forces and
contribute to its stability, in buildings with floors that download in a single direction, parallel walls to the main
elements of the slab, which have no charge from direct vertical forces, but which take up the forces acting in
the horizontal plane, are defined as bracing walls
MASONRY
NONSTRUCTURAL WALL
(PARTITIONING WALL)
Wall that is not part of the main structure of the building, the wall of this type can be suppressed, without
prejudice to the integrity of the rest of the structure, but only after a specialized technical expertise (survey).
CR6-2014: nonstructural wall will be designed to answer the following charges:
self-weight;
weight of objects hanging on the wall;
loads perpendicular to the plane (out of plane) from human action or earthquake. (National Annex
tab. 6.12 NA SR EN 1991-1-1)
Infill partition wall embedded in a RC/steel frame, which is not part of the main structure but which, under
certain conditions, contribute to the lateral stiffness of the building and seismic energy dissipation;
suppression during building exploitation or creating new openings for doors/windows in a these walls will be
made only on the basis of justification by calculation (technical expertise or survey) and appropriate
constructive measures.
This wall will be designed to take orders from:
when interacting with the frame for the seismic design;
self-weight;
weight of suspended/hanging objects;
loads perpendicular to the plane (out of plane) for human action, earthquake and wind (for front
panel).
Types of identified degradation led to the following classification for structural elements of masonry:
1. coupling beams (spandrels), represented by the horizontal elements of masonry of the window or
door openings;
2. piers consists of masonry vertical elements between the window openings;
3. structural wall or pillar of a structural wall.
1. Masonry elements
Provisions of this Code shall apply to the design of all parts / masonry construction elements, structural and
nonstructural, executed with the following types of masonry elements corresponding to standards:
burnt clay masonry units - SR EN 771-1;
masonry elements of autoclaved aerated concrete (AAC) - SR EN 771-4;
1.2. Masonry elements grouping
1.2.1. Grouping according to the confidence level of mechanical properties
a. The average compressive strength of the element: the arithmetic average of the compressive strength of
the elements.
b. The characteristic compressive strength of the element: value of the strength of masonry having a
prescribed probability of 5% of not being attained in a hypothetically unlimited test series. This value
generally corresponds to a specified fractile of the assumed statistical distribution of the particular
property of the material or product in a test series. A nominal value is used as the characteristic value in
some circumstances.
c. The standardized compressive strength of the element: the compressive strength of masonry converted
to the equivalent strength of an "air dried" element of 100 mm width and 100 mm height.
d. Masonry element Category I: masonry element for which the probability of failing to achieve declared
average/characteristic strength is 5%.
e. Masonry element Category II: masonry that does not meet the level of confidence of masonry category I.
Group 1 - burnt
clay and AAC
25%
12.5%
ag0.20g
>25%; 55%
>25%; 45%
- Each of multiple voids 2%
- Each of handling voids 12.5%
Inner wall
Without requests
Outer wall
ag0.15g
ag0.20g
ag0.15g
ag0.20g
10
12
Inner vertical wall elements shall be continuous throughout the length of the element (in the plane of the wall). For
structural masonry walls, and other items can be used in group 2: burnt clay bricks and vertical cored blocks with
special geometry (with thin walls - Group 2B) which satisfy the following conditions on the geometry of the block:
a. voids volume 50% of the block;
b. outer wall thick 11mm te <15mm;
c. inner wall thickness 6mm ti <10mm;
d. vertical interior walls are made continuously throughout the length of the element (the plane of the wall).
Category II masonry can be used only for:
structural walls in buildings of importance classes III and IV in areas with ag 0.15g;
structural walls and household annexes temporary buildings in all seismic zones.
1.2.4. Grouping element according to the apparent density in the dry state
(1) The wall elements are grouped according to the apparent density in the dry state as follows:
Elements LD (low density) - masonry elements with low density in dry conditions ( 1000 kg/m3) is
used only in protected masonry
Elements HD (high density) masonry elements of burnt clay masonry units with density in dry
conditions > 1000 kg/m3 and masonry facade elements (masonry unprotected and protected).
(2) The burnt clay masonry for which, depending on the volume of voids, dry condition density is 1000
kg/m3 and all the AAC elements fall within LD (low density).
(3) To compute the self-weight of the masonry (load on the structure and foundations weight subjected to
seismic action, etc.) masonry elements density is calculated approximately as follows:
For burnt brick elements the design density - with relation (kg/m3) = 1800 (1-vgol) where vgol is the
volume of voids which develop along the entire height of the item (not including the fingerprints);
For AAC elements the design density (which takes into account the average humidity in operation) - with
relation (kg/m3) = 85 (fb +2) where fb is the average standardized strength in N/mm2.
(4) To calculate the design weight for unplastered masonry LD elements and general use mortar (G) with
normal thickness joints will take into account the weight of the mortar as follows:
average thickness of a vertical and horizontal joints will take trost = 12 mm
the average density of the grout will take m = 2000 kg/m3.
(5) To calculate the design weight for unplastered masonry LD elements and thin joints mortar (T) is taken
equal to the design weight as defined above.
(6) To calculate the design weight for unplastered masonry HD elements, regardless of the type of grout
(G or T) will be equal to the design weight as defined above masonry .
MORTARE
Ensure the masonry
body
MASONRY MORTARS
Mortar class
Cement
Sand
Lime
M2.5 c
M2.5 c-v
M5 c
M5 c-v
0.25
M7.5 c
2.75
M10
2.5
How to make:
industrial mortar for masonry (dry or fresh) and mix constituents are dosed in the factory;
semi-industrial masonry mortar (pre-dosed or premixed) constituents are entirely dosed and
delivered to site where they are mixed according to the recipe given by the manufacturer;
Masonry mortar preparation at construction site, will be used to:
Buildings of importance classes III and IV, in all seismic zones;
Buildings of importance classes II in seismic areas ag0,15g;
Household annexes and temporary construction
Masonry mortars are classified according to EN 998-2, according to compressive strength,
expressed by the letter M followed by uniform compressive strength in N/mm2 (M5 mortar with
average unit compressive strength fm = 5N/mm2).
It is a G type mortar.
GROUT
GLUE MORTAR
Performance mortar for masonry with cement, fine sand and glue
(polymer); is used for thin beds and only masonry elements indicated
by these specifications.
PERFORMANCE REQUIREMENTS
FOR DRY MORTAR
Adhesion to masonry
fm
fvko
fxk1
fxk2
CONCRETE
Concrete mortar (grout) is defined as a "very fluid mixture of cement, sand and water
for filling the alveoli or small spaces."
The material is used to fill openings in special forms used for reinforced masonry and
central reinforced core masonry (ZIA/RCM). The ability to completely fill voids and
other confined spaces should be considered the main requirement for grout.
Unit strength for concrete:
fcd - design compressive strength of concrete 6.6.3.3. (5)
fcd * - baseline design compression resistance of concrete 6.6.3.3. (5)
Rc * (baseline)
fck - unitary characteristic compressive strength of concrete 3.3.1. (4), Rck
Mechanical properties of concrete for containment elements and ZIA - Table 8.6
Tensile strength
(yM=1.50)
Compression strength
(yM=1.35)
Shear strength
(yM=1.50)
Elasticity Young
Modulus
C16/20
150
0.55
0.65
<150
0.65
0.75
150
5.8
7.7
<150
6.7
8.9
150
0.115
0.140
<150
0.135
0.165
Anyone
24.000
27.000
Design dtrength
Re (Rp,02) (N/mm2)
fyd (N/mm2)
Strength category 2
340
300
Strength category 1
240
210
Steel type
(2.1)
Partial safety coefficient (taking into account the uncertainties and dimensional variations for the model) is set
differently depending on:
load case for checking: fundamental and seismic;
limit state check: ULS or SLS;
quality of masonry elements and mortar;
execution control type defined in applicable technical regulations.
Partial safety coefficient values - To calculate the ultimate limit state (ULS), the fundamental load case for burnt
clay masonry bricks - see Table 2.1.
Element
category
Mortar
1st Category
2nd Category
Control type
Reduced
Normal
Special
2.7
2.5
2.2
2.5
2.2
2.0
2.0
1.8
3.0
2.8
2.5
2.7
2.5
2.2
Table 8.13
Element
category
Mortar
1st Category
2nd Category
Control type
Reduced
Normal
Special
2.4
2.2
1.9
2.2
1.9
1.8
1.8
1.8
2.7
2.5
2.2
2.4
2.2
2.0
To check the masonry strength for transient design situation (during construction), characteristic
strength values set for the fundamental load case is increased by 25%.
The conditions are considered as a normal control type for execution if:
works are monitored on an ongoing basis by a RTA engineer ;
designer look for / control, rhythmic the progress of work ;
the RTA permanently verifies the materials quality and the work ;
all preliminary checks are performed even for intermediate stages taking as reference the
regulations.
Conditions are considered as a reduce control type for execution if:
works are not monitored on an ongoing basis by a RTA engineer ;
designer does not look for / control, rhythmic the progress of work ;
the RTA does not permanently verifies the materials quality and the work ;
all preliminary checks are not performed even for intermediate stages taking as reference the
regulations.
The definition of characteristic strength (Rk) of masonry: is "the masonry strength value whose
probability of being reached is 5% in a series of alleged attempts (hypothetical) unlimited".
According to this definition, if one accepts the assumption of normal distribution of the series of results,
the characteristic strength is calculated from the average resistance values and coefficient of variation
by relationship:
Rk = Rmed (1-1.645vR)
=
- Average strength =
Coefficient of variation
standard deviation
fk
(4.1)
Values of the constant K for ceramic brick masonry and mortar for general (G)
Table 4.1.
Constant K
0.55
0.45
0.55
Characteristic values for fk for burnt clay masonry elements in Group 1.2 and 2S, with
the standardized strength fb = 5.0 15.0 N/mm2 with M2.5 M15 mortars strength,
calculated with formula (4.1) in view of the conditions from (3) are given in Tables 4.2a
and 4.2b.
fk
M12.5
M10
M7.5
M5
M2.5
15.0
6.60
6.25
5.85
5.35
4.75
3.85
12.5
5.80
5.50
5.15
4.70
4.20
3.40
10.0
4.95
4.70
4.40
4.05
3.55
2.90
7.5
4.05
3.85
3.60
3.30
2.90
2.35
2.70
2.50
2.20
NPS
5.0
NA
Weaving type
Fig. 4.1.
M15
M12.5
M10
M7.5
M5
M2.5
6.75
6.40
6.00
5.50
4.85
3.95
5.40
5.10
4.80
4.40
3.90
3.15
5.95
5.60
5.25
4.80
4.30
3.45
4.75
4.50
4.20
3.85
3.45
2.75
5.10
4.80
4.50
4.15
3.65
2.95
4.10
3.85
3.60
3.30
2.90
2.35
4.15
3.95
3.70
3.35
3.00
2.40
3.30
3.15
2.95
2.70
2.40
1.90
2.75
2.55
2.25
1.85
2.20
2.05
1.80
1.50
15.0
12.5
10.0
7.5
a
5.0
NA
b
fk
M12.5
M10
M7.5
M5
M2.5
8.0
5.31
5.03
4.70
4.31
3.82
3.10
7.0
4.58
4.28
3.93
3.48
2.83
6.0
3.84
3.53
3.12
2.53
5.0
3.38
3.10
2.75
2.23
4.0
2.66
2.35
1.90
3.0
1.92
1.56
fk
For structural walls with elements of burnt clay bricks and AAC:
Table 8.2.Minimal required values for characteristic compressive strength fk (N/mm2) for
structural walls of buildings of importance classes III IV
1.70
2.15
3.00
1.85
2.30
3.15
2.00
2.50
3.25
2.50
3.00
4.00
2.70