The capability of steel fiber-reinforced concrete to carry tensile stresses, also in the presence of wide cracks, allows designers to reduce the area of steel reinforcing bars. This aspect has been taken into account in a new design procedure of concrete segmental linings, capable of computing the behavior of ordinary reinforced cross-sections subjected to bending moment and normal forces. Accordingly, a practical formula to quantify the possible reduction of steel rebars in fiber-reinforced concrete is proposed in the present paper. This formula, which is in accordance with code rule requirements, has been used to optimize the reinforcement of prefabricated concrete lining
The present paper investigates the advantages of the use of steel fibre reinforced concrete for the ...
The present paper investigates the advantages of the use of steel fibre reinforced concrete for the ...
none3noThe present paper investigates the advantages of using Steel Fibre Reinforced Concrete (SFRC)...
The capability of steel fiber-reinforced concrete to carry tensile stresses, also in the presence of...
Tunnel linings are generally reinforced with conventional rebars that are placed to resist tensile s...
The paper deals with the concrete lining behaviour at Serviceability Limit State (SLS) in order to e...
The paper focuses on the study of the final lining (second phase) of a tunnel excavated by means of ...
The fiber contribution to the ultimate limit state capacity of precast and cast-in situ tunnel linin...
The proposed paper concerns the optimized design of FRC tunnel linings with special emphasis to prec...
Concrete mixtures reinforced with a combination of steel rebar and fibers, i.e., Hybrid Reinforced C...
This research work concerns shield driven tunnels made in ground conditions. The reinforcement of pr...
none3The advantages of the use of steel fibre reinforced concrete for the realization of the lining ...
The present paper deals with structural behavior of concrete linings at Serviceability Limit State (...
The paper focuses on the advances in precast tunnel segments with particular reference to the reinfo...
The paper concerns precast tunnel segments for the Line 1 of the Valencia Metro (Venezuela) where th...
The present paper investigates the advantages of the use of steel fibre reinforced concrete for the ...
The present paper investigates the advantages of the use of steel fibre reinforced concrete for the ...
none3noThe present paper investigates the advantages of using Steel Fibre Reinforced Concrete (SFRC)...
The capability of steel fiber-reinforced concrete to carry tensile stresses, also in the presence of...
Tunnel linings are generally reinforced with conventional rebars that are placed to resist tensile s...
The paper deals with the concrete lining behaviour at Serviceability Limit State (SLS) in order to e...
The paper focuses on the study of the final lining (second phase) of a tunnel excavated by means of ...
The fiber contribution to the ultimate limit state capacity of precast and cast-in situ tunnel linin...
The proposed paper concerns the optimized design of FRC tunnel linings with special emphasis to prec...
Concrete mixtures reinforced with a combination of steel rebar and fibers, i.e., Hybrid Reinforced C...
This research work concerns shield driven tunnels made in ground conditions. The reinforcement of pr...
none3The advantages of the use of steel fibre reinforced concrete for the realization of the lining ...
The present paper deals with structural behavior of concrete linings at Serviceability Limit State (...
The paper focuses on the advances in precast tunnel segments with particular reference to the reinfo...
The paper concerns precast tunnel segments for the Line 1 of the Valencia Metro (Venezuela) where th...
The present paper investigates the advantages of the use of steel fibre reinforced concrete for the ...
The present paper investigates the advantages of the use of steel fibre reinforced concrete for the ...
none3noThe present paper investigates the advantages of using Steel Fibre Reinforced Concrete (SFRC)...