The document discusses prestressing, which is the intentional application of compressive force to resist tensile stresses from external loads. Prestressing has been used for centuries in structures like barrels and bicycle wheels by applying initial tension. Prestressed concrete applies this concept by stressing steel tendons before concrete pouring to counteract tension and increase load capacity.
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The document discusses prestressing, which is the intentional application of compressive force to resist tensile stresses from external loads. Prestressing has been used for centuries in structures like barrels and bicycle wheels by applying initial tension. Prestressed concrete applies this concept by stressing steel tendons before concrete pouring to counteract tension and increase load capacity.
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Prestressing, itself means, an intentional application
of a pre-determined force on a system, for resisting
the internal stresses that may be developed in the system, due to external loads. It is meant for improving the behaviour and capacity of the system. If the system is expected to have tensile stresses due to external loads pre-compression can be given to the system to a desired level even before the application of the external loads. Then the tension developed due to the external loads, will get largely nullified by the initially applied compression. This principle was used long back in our civilization. It is reflected in the design of barrels to contain liquid or wheel of a bicycle or guyed ropes of mast or inflation of tyres of a vehicle Metalstrip wound around wooden boards of barrel are tightened to create pre- compression on the barrels. When liquid is stored in the barrels, tension is generated on the wooden boards and the already provided pre-compression nullifies this tension. WOODEN BARREL Similar is the effect of spokes of the bicycle wheel, which has an initial tension to resist subsequent compression under loading. These are the cases of uniform prestressing of the material, in an element, to counteract the uniform stresses due to external loads. It will be of the same nature (say tension or compression) throughout the material. This philosophy of prestressing is extended later to materials, which are subjected to different types of stresses, namely tension or compression within the element itself due to external loads BICYCLE SPOKES In ordinary reinforced cement concrete, compressive stresses are taken up by concrete and tensile stresses by steel alone. The concrete below the neutral axis is ignored since it is weak in tension. Although steel takes up the tensile stresses, the concrete in the tensile zone develops minute cracks. the load carrying capacity of such concrete sections can be increased if steel and concrete both are stressed before the application of external loads. This is the concept of prestressed concrete. In prestressed concrete the weakness of concrete in tension is compensated by the tensile strength of steel - in this case, steel wires, strands, or bars The compressive strength of the concrete is used to advantage by applying an external compressive force to it which either keeps it permanently in compression even when loads are applied to it during its service life (fully-prestressed) or limits the value of any tensile stress which arises under load (partial prestressing) The pre-compressing or prestressing of concrete can be likened to picking up a row of books by pressing the books together. The greater the number of books (the longer the span) the greater the force that has to be applied at either end of the row to prevent the row (the beam) collapsing under its own weight. The row of books has zero tensile capacity. Hence the beam made of books cannot even carry its own self-weight. However, if the books are externally compressed (prestressed), the beam can resist the self-weight and even some additional loads kept at the top till the tensile stress developed by bending overcomes the compressive stress induced by prestress. The same resisting mechanism exists in a prestressed concrete member Thank you