C 10 - Serviceability Deflections
C 10 - Serviceability Deflections
C 10 - Serviceability Deflections
COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING
CHAPTER 10
SERVICEABILITY
Deflections
Sardar R. Mohammad Amir M. Salih Jaza H. Muhammad
2019-2020 ©
Draft Edition
REINFORCED CONCRETE 2020 - DRAFT
CHAPTER 10 SERVICEABILITY
Cracks
Vibration
Fatigue
Deflection (the main topic of this chapter)
10.2 Deflections
The deflections of concern are generally those that occur during the normal
service life of the member. In service, a member sustains the full dead load,
plus some fraction or all of the specified service live load.
Short-term Deflection
It is the concrete deformations that occur immediately when load is applied
Long-term deflection
o The deformations that take place gradually over an extended time.
These time-dependent deformations are chiefly due to concrete
creep and shrinkage.
o As a result of these influences, reinforced concrete members
continue to deflect with the passage of time.
o Long-term deflections continue over a period of several years, and
may eventually be 2 or more times the initial elastic deflections.
Also, known as
o Immediate deflection
o Instantaneous deflection
o Initial deflection
The general form of elastic deflections
𝑓 𝐼
𝑀 ; 𝑓 0.62 𝑓
𝑦
𝑀 𝑀
𝐼 ∗ 𝐼 1 ∗ 𝐼
𝑀 𝑀
𝑨𝒔
𝝆
𝒃𝒅
𝑬𝒔 𝟐𝟎𝟎 𝟎𝟎𝟎
𝒏
𝑬𝒄 𝟒𝟕𝟎𝟎 𝒇𝒄
𝒌 𝟐𝝆𝒏 𝝆𝒏 𝟐 𝝆𝒏
𝟑
𝒃 ∗ 𝒌𝒅 𝟐
𝑰𝒄𝒓 𝒏 𝑨𝒔 𝒅 𝒌𝒅
𝟑
by the factor
𝜻
𝝀∆
𝟏 𝟓𝟎 𝝆
𝑨𝒔
𝝆
𝒃𝒘 𝒅
(at mid-span for continuous and supports for cantilever)
Notes
Values of ξ given in the ACI Code and Commentary are satisfactory for
Stresses in concrete
Amount of tensile and compressive reinforcement
Member size
Curing conditions
Temperature
Relative Humidity
Age of concrete at the time of loading
Duration of loading
One could use an iterative procedure, initially basing the frame analysis
on uncracked concrete members, determining the moments, calculating
effective EI terms for all members, then recalculating moments,
adjusting the EI values, etc.
The process could be continued for as many iterations as needed, until
changes are not significant. However, such an approach would be
expensive and time-consuming, even with computer use.
Usually, a very approximate approach is adopted. Member flexural
stiffnesses for the frame analysis are based simply on properties of
uncracked rectangular concrete cross sections.
This can be defended by noting that the moments in a continuous frame
depend only on the relative values of EI in its members, not the absolute
values.
Hence, if a consistent assumption, that is, uncracked section, is used
for all members, the results should be valid.
Although cracking is certainly more prevalent in beams than in columns,
thus reducing the relative EI for the beams, this is compensated to a
large extent, in typical cases, by the stiffening effect of the flanges in the
positive bending regions of continuous T beam construction.
10.14 Example 1
Required
SOLUTION
EXTRA INFORMATION
10.15.1 Homework 1
10.16 References