Minimal mass design of strengthening techniques for planar and curved masonry structures

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Abstract

We present a discrete element model of a masonry structure strengthened through the application of reinforcing elements designed to work in tension. We describe the reinforced masonry structure as a tensegrity network of masonry rods, mainly working in compression, and tension elements corresponding to fiber-reinforced composite reinforcements, which are assumed to behave as elastic-perfectly-plastic members. We optimize a background structure connecting each node of the discrete model of the structure with all the neighbors lying inside a sphere of prescribed radius, in order to determine a minimal mass resisting structure under the given loading conditions and prescribed yielding constraints. Fiber-reinforced composite reinforcements can be naturally replaced by any other reinforcements that are strong in tension (e.g., timber or steel beams/ties). Some numerical examples illustrate the potential of the proposed strategy in designing tensile reinforcements of a three-dimensional structure composed of a masonry vault and supporting walls.

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Carpentieri, G., Fabbrocino, F., De Piano, M., Berardi, V. P., Feo, L., & Fraternali, F. (2016). Minimal mass design of strengthening techniques for planar and curved masonry structures. In ECCOMAS Congress 2016 - Proceedings of the 7th European Congress on Computational Methods in Applied Sciences and Engineering (Vol. 2, pp. 2210–2219). National Technical University of Athens. https://doi.org/10.7712/100016.1954.4654

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