A Refined Multi-Spring Model for Prestressed Precast Concrete Connections
Abstract
1. Introduction
- Lack of Physical Clarity: The springs lack a direct correspondence to identifiable physical mechanisms (e.g., concentrated compression zone, discrete shear transfer). This obscures the model’s interpretation and hinders its utility for guiding design.
- Numerical Inefficiency: The proliferation of springs required by these methods often leads to numerical instability and significant computational cost, limiting the model’s practicality for large-scale or dynamic analysis.
2. Methodology
2.1. Methodological Scheme
- (1)
- Objective: To develop a mechanically clear and computationally efficient MSM for prestressed precast concrete connections.
- (2)
- Scope Definition: The model focuses on simulating the key behavioral aspects of the connection, including the concrete compressive zone, the unbonded prestressing tendon, and the interface shear transfer.
- (1)
- Analysis of Conventional Multi-Spring Models: Examine models that use Gaussian/Lobatto integration to determine spring locations and properties. Identify their core limitations:
- (2)
- Lack of Physical Meaning: Spring Distribution and properties are derived mathematically, not from physical material behavior.
- (3)
- Numerical Instability: A relatively large number of springs is required to obtain sufficiently accurate analysis results. However, an excessive number inevitably increases model complexity, raises modeling workload, and introduces computational convergence issues.
- (1)
- Core Innovation: Replace the numerous, mathematically defined springs with a minimal set of macro-scale springs, each with a distinct physical role.
- (2)
- Spring System Definition: This paper develops a section analysis method (SAM) to determine the distribution of the spring and the mechanical property for each gap element is derived from the mechanical property of the scope of concrete it represents.
2.2. Principle
2.3. Section Analysis Method for Distribution and Mechanical Property of the Gap Elements
3. Experiment and Numerical Model
3.1. Experiment
3.2. Numerical Model
- (1)
- Zero-length elements with compression-only material properties (gap elements) are adopted to simulate the opening/closing behavior of the contact interface.
- (2)
- Truss element with STEEL02 [32] material (assigned initial strain), which takes isotropic hardening and Bauschinger effect into consideration, is used to simulate PT.
- (3)
- Distribution reinforcement in slab, energy dissipation mild-steel are all simulated by zero-length elements using STEEL02 material. CONCRETE02 [33] material is used to simulate the concrete, transverse confinement effect is accounted [34]. The length of the truss element in this model () is different from the actual length of unbonded reinforcement in test (), so the material properties and area of the elements require modification (Kim, 2002) [18] using Formula (7).where , are the area and yielding strength of the mild steel in the numerical model; , are in test.
- (4)
- Vertical coupling restraint is applied to limit the shear slip between C5 and B5, neglecting shear slip between the precast beam and column.
- (5)
- In the links of C2-B2 and C10-B10, two elements are used: one zero-length element (assigned Concrete01 material with compression-only material properties) to simulate the contact interface and one zero-length element to simulate the behavior of rebar in the slab.
- (6)
- Two zero-length elements are used to model the compressive behavior of the contact interface and mild energy dissipation steel for C3-B3 and C11-B11 links.
- (7)
- Shear reinforcement in exterior connections is simulated by a zero-length element (assigned Hysteretic material) between C4 and B4. Noting that the bond length of shear reinforcement is 15d (d is the diameter of rebar), which is shorter than the anchorage length, the force-displacement relation of the zero-length element is derived from the bond–slip relation between concrete and rebar.where s stands for slip displacement, and f(s) is the bond–slip relation between concrete and rebar [35].
- (8)
- In the links of C6-B6, C14-B14, C7-B7, and C15-B15, zero-length elements with compression-only material properties (gap elements) are used to simulate the contact interface. According to the section analysis method, the minimum position of the compression center is 56 mm (take A3 for example); setting gap element 1 (Figure 10) at this position simulates the compressive zone with 112 mm high at the bottom of the contact interface. (C6-B6, C14-B14) is designed to simulate the rest concrete when the scope of the compressive zone exceeds the representative scope of gap element 1. For A3, the position of gap element 2 is (188 − 112)/2 + 112 = 150. Where 188 mm is the calculated height of the compression zone using the section analysis method (shown in Figure 10). The mechanical property for C6-B6, C14-B14, C7-B7, and C15-B15 is derived from the mechanical property of the scope of representative concrete element with the length of h/3 (the length of the plastic zone is h/3 (Chong et al., 2012) [29], where h is the beam section height). The length of the truss element in this model () is different from the actual length of the plastic zone, so the material properties and area of gap elements require modification (Kim, 2002) [18] using Formula (9).where , are the area and constitutive relationship of the concrete material in the numerical model; , are in test.
- (9)
- Figure 11 shows the position of gap elements between C2-B2, C10-B10, C3-B3, and C11-B11. The mechanical property of the gap elements is derived from the mechanical property of the representative concrete. The rest scope of the interface is simulated by the gap elements between C5-B5 and C13-B13.
4. Experimental Validation
4.1. Validation of Skeleton Curves
4.2. Validation of Hysteretic Behavior
4.3. Validation of the Stress of PT
4.4. Validation of the Shift in Compression Center at Contact Interface
- Impose a rotation and obtain the moment based on test results (Figure 15);
- Guess an initial neutral axis position; calculate the strain of concrete in the compression zone using the section analysis method, evaluate corresponding compression force , and calculate the position of compression center ;
- Calculate the tensile force of the prestressed tendon according to the section rotation and measurement;
- Calculate the tensile force of mild steel based on the section equilibrium.
- Evaluate moment capacity;are the distances from the neutral axis to the mild steel and prestressed tendons, respectively;
- Does ?Yes, Go to Step 7;No, Revise neutral axis position and go to Step 2.
- End.
4.5. Comparison of Different Models
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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| Connection Type | Specimen Name | Slab Steel | Bending Steel | Shear Steel | Length of Unbonded Mild Steel (mm) | Unbonded PT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interior | A2 | 12C6 | 3C22 | -- | 360 (inside column) | 4Φs15.2 |
| A3 | 12C6 | 3C22 | -- | 120 (outside column) (10% weakened) | 4Φs15.2 | |
| Exterior | B2 | 12C6 | 3C16 | 3C14 | 360 (inside column) | 4Φs15.2 |
| B3 | 12C6 | 3C16 | 3C14 | 120 (outside column) (10% weakened) | 4Φs15.2 |
| Indicator | Proposed Model | Plastic Hinge Model | Traditional MSM | Solid Model |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Computational Accuracy | High | Low (cannot reflect the actual mechanical mechanism of the structure) | Increases gradually with the number of springs | High |
| Model Complexity | Simple | Simple | Increases gradually from simple to complex as the number of springs increases | Complex |
| Computational Efficiency | High | High | Decreases gradually as the number of springs increases | Low (suitable only for component-level simulation, difficult for global structural analysis) |
| Neutral Axis Variation | Accurate | Unable to simulate | Simulation accuracy improves with more springs | Accurate |
| Compressive Zone Height | Accurate | Unable to simulate | Simulation accuracy improves with more springs | Accurate |
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Qi, H.; Qin, J.; Zhang, M.; Zhang, Z. A Refined Multi-Spring Model for Prestressed Precast Concrete Connections. Buildings 2025, 15, 4428. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15244428
Qi H, Qin J, Zhang M, Zhang Z. A Refined Multi-Spring Model for Prestressed Precast Concrete Connections. Buildings. 2025; 15(24):4428. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15244428
Chicago/Turabian StyleQi, Hu, Jie Qin, Mengke Zhang, and Zhonghao Zhang. 2025. "A Refined Multi-Spring Model for Prestressed Precast Concrete Connections" Buildings 15, no. 24: 4428. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15244428
APA StyleQi, H., Qin, J., Zhang, M., & Zhang, Z. (2025). A Refined Multi-Spring Model for Prestressed Precast Concrete Connections. Buildings, 15(24), 4428. https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15244428
