Advantages of Prestressed Concrete
Advantages of Prestressed Concrete
Advantages of Prestressed Concrete
There are 4 types of prestressed concrete available as discussed in our previous post. The
advantages of prestressed concrete are as follows:
1. Prestressed member is free from crack,so the resisting impact, shock and reversal of
stresses is much more than reinforced concrete.
4. Prestressed concrete can be used in long spans as the section of member can be reduced.
1. The major problem with prestressed concrete is that it needs specialized construction
machineries like jacks anchorage etc.
3. For concrete prestressing, high tensile reinforcement bars are needed which costs greater
than generally used mild steel reinforcement bars.
Second:
High strength concrete offers high resistance in tension and shear, as well as bond and bearing.
Fourth: It also has a higher modulus of elasticity and smaller creep strain, resulting in smaller
loss of prestress.
It is a general practice to specify a lower strength of concrete at transfer than its 28 day strength.
This is desirable in order to permit early transfer of pre-stress to the concrete
In PC, the strains are produced as well as stresses. This is necessary to estimate the
Loss of prestress in steel.
Such strains can be classified into 4 types: elastic strains, lateral strains, creep strains, and
shrinkage strains.
Lateral strains
-Lateral strains are computed by Poissons ratio. The loss of prestress is slightly decreased in
biaxial prestressing.
-Poissons ratio varies from 0.15 to 0.22, averaging about 0.17.
Creep strains Esp. from 28 to 90 days at time of loading, from 2-8 MPa, 50%RH
1. Those loaded at 90 days had less creep than those at 28 days, by roughly 10%.
2. The total amount of creep strain at the end of 20 years ranged from 1 to 5 (averaging. 3in
Japanese definition 2).
3. The creep at 50% RH was about 1.4 times that in air at 70% RH and about 3 times that for
storage in water.
4. Creep decreased as the size of specimen increased.
Shrinkage strain
-As distinguished from creep, shrinkage in concrete is its contraction due to drying and chemical
changes dependent on time and moisture conditions, but not on stresses.
-It may ranges from 0.0000 to 0.0010 and beyond. Stored under very dry condition, 0.0010 can
be expected.
-Shrinkage of concrete is somewhat proportional to the amount of water.
-Hence, the water cement ratio and the cement paste should be kept to minimum.
-Thus aggregate of larger size, well graded for minimum void, will need a smaller amount of
cement paste, and shrinkage will be smaller
-Cement: shrinkage is small for cements high in C3S and low in the alkalisand the oxides of
sodium and potassium.
-The amount of shrinkage varies, depending on the individual conditions.
-For the purpose of PC design, shrinkage strain would be 0.0002 to 0.0006.
-The rate of shrinkage depends chiefly on the weather conditions-swelling during rainy seasons
and shrinking during dry ones.
Compacting
-Compacting the concrete by vibration is usually desirable and necessary.
-Usually, without using an excessive amount of mortar, a low water cement ratio and a low
slump concrete must be chosen.
-There are only a few isolated applications in which concrete of high slump is employed.
Curing
-Too early drying of concrete may result in shrinkage cracks before applying prestress.
-Only by the careful curing can the specified high strength can be attained.
- (As I explained, high strength concrete is easier to be cracked.)
-Steam curing and also auto-clave curing is often resorted to in the pre-casting factory.
Early hardening
-To speed plant production or to hasten field construction.
-High-early strength cement or steam curing is commonly employed.
-Accelerators should be employed with caution. For example, calcium chloride will cause
corrosion.
5. Self-stressing cement
-Types of cements that expand chemically after setting and during hardening are known as
expansive or self-stressing cement.
-If used, the steel is prestressed in tension, concrete is in compression, known as chemical or
self-stressed concrete.
When concrete made with expanding cement is unrestrained, the amount will be 3-5%, and
the concrete will disintegrate by itself.
-When restrained, the amount of expansion can be controlled but not so much.
-By applying restraint in one direction, the growth in the other two directions can be limited
because of the crystalline nature of hardened paste. (maybe, not well understood)
-When high-strength steel is used to produce the prestress, say 1035 MPa and an Es of 186x103
MPa, an expansion of 1035/186x103 = 0.55% (5500) will be required (very difficult to
achieve).
1. Pre-tensioning, and
2. Post-tensioning
Pre-tensioned concrete
Pre-tensioned bridge girder in precasting bed. Note
single-strand tendons exiting through formwork
The amount of bond (or adhesion) achievable between the freshly set concrete and the surface of
the tendons is critical to the pre-tensioning process, as it determines when the tendon anchorages
can be safely released. Higher bond strength in early-age concrete allows more economical
fabrication as it speeds production. To promote this, pre-tensioned tendons are usually composed
of isolated single wires or strands, as this provides a greater surface area for bond action than
bundled strand tendons.
Pre-tensioned concrete is most commonly used for the fabrication of structural beams, floor
slabs, hollow-core planks, balconies, lintels, driven piles, water tanks and concrete pipes.
Post-tensioned concrete
Casting the tendon ducts/sleeves into the concrete before any tensioning occurs allows them to
be readily "profiled" to any desired shape including incorporating vertical and/or horizontal
curvature. When the tendons are tensioned, this profiling results in reaction forces being
imparted onto the hardened concrete, and these can be beneficially used to counter any loadings
subsequently applied to the structure.
Prestressed
Concrete
Design
Submitted by:
Bautista, Kurt Russel M.
Submitted to:
Engr. Noel Siapno