Analysis and Design of Prestressed Concrete

£135.00

Analysis and Design of Prestressed Concrete

Construction and heavy industry Building construction and materials

Author: Di Hu

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Language: English

Published by: Elsevier

Published on: 17th April 2022

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 52 Mb

ISBN: 9780323859981


Introduction

Prestressing concrete technology is critical to understanding problems in existing civic structures including railway and highway bridges; to the rehabilitation of older structures; and to the design of new high-speed railway and long-span highway bridges.

Analysis and Design of Prestressed Concrete delivers foundational concepts, and the latest research and design methods for the engineering of prestressed concrete, paying particular attention to crack resistance in the design of high-speed railway and long-span highway prestressed concrete bridges.

The volume offers readers a comprehensive resource on prestressing technology and applications, as well as the advanced treatment of prestress losses and performance.

Key Aspects

Key aspects of this volume include analysis and design of prestressed concrete structures using a prestressing knowledge system, from initial stages to service; detailed loss calculation; time-dependent analysis on cross-sectional stresses; straightforward, simplified methods specified in codes; and in-depth calculation methods.

Sixteen chapters combine standards and current research, theoretical analysis, and design methods into a practical resource on the analysis and design of prestressed concrete, as well as presenting novel calculation methods and theoretical models of practical use to engineers.

Highlights

Presents a new approach to calculating prestress losses due to anchorage seating

Provides a unified method for calculating long-term prestress loss

Details cross-sectional stress analysis of prestressed concrete beams from jacking to service

Explains a new calculation method for long-term deflection of beams caused by creep and shrinkage

Gives a new theoretical model for calculating long-term crack width

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