Effect of Sheath Modeling on Unbonded Post-Tensioned Concrete under Blast Loads
- Authors
- Choi, Hyeon-Sik; Kim, Min Kyu; Shin, Jiuk; Kang, Thomas H. -K.
- Issue Date
- Jan-2026
- Publisher
- Tech Science Press
- Keywords
- Unbonded post-tensioned concrete; sheath implementation; blast loading; finite element analysis
- Citation
- CMES - Computer Modeling in Engineering and Sciences
- Indexed
- SCIE
- Journal Title
- CMES - Computer Modeling in Engineering and Sciences
- URI
- https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/82260
- DOI
- 10.32604/cmes.2025.074029
- ISSN
- 1526-1492
1526-1506
- Abstract
- Unbonded post-tensioned (PT) concrete systems are widely used in safety-critical structures, yet ing practices for prestress implementation and tendon-concrete interaction remain inconsistent. This study investigates the effects of sheath (duct) implementation and confinement assumptions through nonlinear finite element analysis. Four modeling cases were defined, consisting of an explicit sheath without tendon-concrete confinement (S) and no-sheath variants with different confinement levels (X, N, A). One-way beams and two-way panels were analyzed, and panel blast responses were validated against experimental results. In both beams and panels, average initial levels were similar across models, through local stress concentrations appeared when the sheath was modeled. blast loading, these local effects became critical, and the sheath-implemented model reproduced experimental behavior most accurately, whereas non-implemented models deviated. Reduced blast intensity diminished the differences among models, thereby reaffirming that sheath-induced localization and damage propagation are critical factors. findings highlight the importance of explicit sheath implementation for realistic numerical assessment of unbonded structures under extreme loads.
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Collections - 공과대학 > School of Architectural Engineering > Journal Articles

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