The invention relates to an anchorage for at least one pre-tensioned or stressed tensile element, wherein the tensile force is transmittable to an anchor body by means of one or several wedges and a wedge-shaped layer has a modulus of elasticity that is lower compared to the other parts of the anchorage, whereby the greatest thickness of the wedge-shaped layer, measured normal to the longitudinal axis of the tensile element, lies in the region of the anchorage which is near the load.
Wedge-anchorages have been used for many years for the pre-tensioning of prestressing steels made of high-strength steel. They are based on a simple principle and can be manufactured with a low expenditure of time and materials. For prestressed concrete constructions, the wedge-anchorage is the most common type of anchorage.
With wedge-anchorages, the force in the tensile element is introduced into the wedges via shearing strains and is passed on from there into the anchor body. Wedges and anchor bodies are in contact via an inclined plane on which the wedges can slide. When the tensile element is loaded, a force of pressure normal to the tensile element is created due to the wedge shape, which force presses the wedges against the tensile element.
Internationally, new types of materials such as fibre composites are increasingly used instead of steel for pre-tensioned or stressed tensile elements such as lamellae, wires, rods or cords. Compared to metallic tensile elements, fibre composites have a very high corrosion resistance and a low weight. A significant disadvantage of fibre composites is their high sensitivity to transverse pressure.
The height of the maximum transmittable shearing strain between the wedge and the tensile element conforms to the contact pressure. The higher the contact pressure, the higher the maximum transmittable shearing strain. The contact pressure produces a transverse pressure in the tensile element. In case of materials which are sensitive to transverse pressure, such as, e.g., fibre composites, the maximum transverse pressure which occurs must not exceed a particular quantity.
In order to activate the shearing strains between the wedge and the tensile element, a minimum amount of slippage is necessary. With a conventional wedge-anchorage, a high contact pressure between the wedge and the tensile element is created in the region near the load, which contact pressure produces there also a high shearing strain which decays quickly and remains almost constant up to the region remote from the load. The sum of the shearing strains along the entire contact surface between the wedge and the tensile element corresponds to the tensile force in the tensile element. The greatest shearing strain occurs at the site of the maximum contact pressure, where also the largest amount of tensile force per surface unit is transmitted. It is a disadvantage that, from the site of the maximum shearing strain to the region remote from the load, the shearing strain can hardly be activated. Another disadvantage of a conventional anchorage is that the maximum contact pressure and the maximum shearing strain have to be relatively low, since materials such as fibre composites fail under low contact pressures or transverse pressures.
In WO 95/29308, a conical casting anchorage for fibre composites is described. The anchor sleeve has a conical cavity. Along the direction of the tensile element, the cavity is filled in sections with a casting compound having different moduli of elasticity. In the section on the region near the load, a casting compound with the lowest modulus of elasticity is inserted. In the subsequent sections up to the region remote from the load, casting materials with ever increasing moduli of elasticity are used. In this way, a more uniform transmission of power from the tensile element to the casting body is achieved. However, the manufacture of these layers is a complex process.
EP 0 197 912 A2 discloses an anchorage for prestressing elements made of high-strength steel, wherein the anchor body is composed of two layers of different materials such as a synthetic material or a soft metal. The layer made of a softer material is designed with a constant thickness across the entire wedge length or with a layer which is variable across the wedge length but has the smallest thickness in the region near the load. If the tensile element is loaded, high transverse pressure peaks occur in the region near the load. Materials sensitive to transverse pressure, such as fibre composites, are unable to withstand these high transverse pressures and hence fail prematurely.
In EP 0 197 912, a further variant is shown according to which two wedges lying one after the other in the longitudinal direction of the tensile element are provided in a one-piece anchor body, wherein the wedge closer to the load is formed by a pressed piece which is softer than the tensile element, said wedge-shaped pressed piece having its greatest thickness in the region near the load. The wedge more remote from the load is designed as an anchor wedge and has its greatest thickness in the region remote from the load so that thereby stress peaks and thus transverse pressure peaks occur at the tensile element.
It is the object of the invention to provide an anchorage wherein the contact pressures and the shearing strains which act upon the tensile element to be anchored are evenly distributed across the clamping length of the tensile element or increase slightly from the region near the load to the region remote from the load and exhibit smaller maximum values for contact pressures and shearing strains than the known embodiments. In addition, the manufacture and installation on site are supposed to be feasible in a significantly simplified manner as compared to a casting anchorage.
Said object is achieved according to the invention in that the wedge and/or the anchor body is/are formed at least by two wedge-shaped adjacent layers, with at least one of the layers being formed from a material having a lower modulus of elasticity than the material from which the further layer(s) of the wedge and/or of the anchor body is/are formed, and the greatest thickness of said layer is provided in the region near the load.
In this way, it is possible to evenly distribute the contact pressure and the shearing strains between the wedge and the tensile element from the region near the load to the region remote from the load or even to cause them to increase slightly. If the ratio of the moduli of elasticity of the layers is sufficiently large, the total stiffness of both layers normal to the longitudinal axis of the tensile element is determined mainly by the layer consisting of a material with a low modulus of elasticity. The thicker the layer with a low modulus of elasticity, the lower the stiffness normal to the longitudinal axis of the tensile element. Therefore, the stiffness normal to the longitudinal axis of the tensile element is lower in the region near the load, where the thickness of the layer with a low modulus of elasticity reaches its maximum, than in the region remote from the load. This lower stiffness in the region near the load of this statically indeterminate system causes a lower maximum contact pressure and thus an even distribution of the contact pressure or a slight increase from the region near the load to the region remote from the load. In this way, it also becomes possible to better activate the shearing strains in the contact area between the tensile element and the wedge across the entire length. The low maximum contact pressure thus achieved prevents the tensile element from being destroyed as a result of the transverse pressure.
Advantageous embodiments of the anchorage according to the invention are characterized in the subclaims.
Below, the invention is illustrated further by way of several exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawing.
Therein:
Section III-III in
The anchorage 7 according to
Section V-V in
If lamellae are used as a tensile element 1, it is not always necessary to use several wedges 3 for the anchorage, see
The wedge 3 can also be composed of several layers 31, 32, 34 having lower and higher moduli of elasticity 32, 34, as illustrated in
In
In
The layers 32, 33, 34, 22, 23 made of a material with a lower modulus of elasticity can also be prepared by geometrical adjustments such as pores, holes, cavities or other recesses.
The layers 32, 33, 34, 22, 23 having lower and higher moduli of elasticity 21, 31 can be achieved in an anchor body 2 or in a wedge 3 during manufacture by means of a specific treatment such as, for instance, by heating or cooling processes. In this way, it is possible to produce layers with a variable modulus of elasticity which exhibit the same modulus of elasticity along the longitudinal axis 4 of the tensile element I and the greatest thickness in the region 5 near the load.
The design with a wedge 3 consisting of at least one layer 32 with a lower modulus of elasticity and one layer 31 with a higher modulus of elasticity or with an anchor body 2 consisting of at least one layer 22 with a lower modulus of elasticity and one layer 21 with a higher modulus of elasticity can be used in combination with each other. Likewise, the layers with a lower modulus of elasticity can be supplemented with or replaced by geometrical adjustments such as pores, holes, cavities or other recesses.
The manufacture of an anchorage 7 of a tensile element 1, formed by a CFK-lamella 1 which usually has a modulus of elasticity of between 165000 and 300000 N/mm2, a strength of between 1500 and 3500 N/mm2 and a thickness of from 0.5 to 2.0 mm, as illustrated in
Steel can be used for the layer 31 of the wedge 3 with a higher modulus of elasticity, and epoxy resin can be used for the layer 32, 33 having a lower modulus of elasticity. The modulus of elasticity of steel amounts to 210000 N/mm2 and that of epoxy resin amounts to approx. 5800 N/mm2. The production of a wedge 3 as illustrated in
Instead of steal and epoxy resin, other materials can also be used, thereby, it is important only that the difference between a higher and a lower modulus of elasticity is large enough.
The higher modulus of elasticity must be at least twice as high as the lower modulus of elasticity, suitably, it is between 20 and 30 times higher.
With epoxy resins, the modulus of elasticity can be increased by more than double by the addition of filling materials such as balls of Al2O3 having diameters of between 0.5 and 3 mm. Thus, it is possible to use the same epoxy resin but with Al2O3-balls for the layer 22, 32 with a lower modulus of elasticity which is made of epoxy resin and for the layer 21, 31 with a higher modulus of elasticity.
Wedges 3 for tensile elements 1 designed as lamellae have no curved surfaces. They can be produced in a casing by casting or mechanically by means of an extruder. This works in such a way that the cross-section of the wedge 3 comprising the layers 21, 22, 31, 32, 33, 34 with a lower and a higher modulus of elasticity is pressed as a strand from a nozzle. Subsequently, the wedges are cut in the required widths from said strand.
The non-positive connection of the layers 31, 32, 33, 34, 21, 22 with a lower and a higher modulus of elasticity of the wedge 3 or the anchor body 2 can be accomplished by gearing and/or adhesive bonding. The gear tooth system can be designed as illustrated in
If the tensile elements 1 are anchored with wedges 3, the shear transmission between the tensile element 1 and the wedge 3 can be effected by friction, adhesive bonding and/or gearing. If the transmission is effected by friction, it is suitable to increase the same by roughening the contact surfaces or to use a friction material. A good friction material is, for example, a synthetic carbon fibre material, with the carbon fibres enclosing a right angle with the friction surface.
If the tensile element 1 and the wedge 3 are connected by adhesive bonding, epoxide resin adhesives such as Sikadur 30 of Messrs. SIKA or the fast-curing five-minute epoxide adhesive Hysol 3422 of Messrs. Loctite are suitable. The bonding can be improved by profiling similar to what is illustrated in
The connection can also be established by profiling. In doing so, it is suitable if the profile is designed in a regular manner, for example in the cross-section, as a result of saw teeth or as a sine wave. On the wedges 3, the profile must be diametrically opposed to the profile of the tensile element 1 so that gearing becomes possible. When producing the tensile element 1, the profile can be pressed into the soft matrix material on both sides, using rolls. The profiling of the wedge 3 can be effected during casting by appropriate shaping in the casing.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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A 2062/2003 | Dec 2003 | AT | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/AT04/00449 | 12/21/2004 | WO | 8/15/2006 |