1. Introduction
During the last few decades, the use of FRP (fiber-reinforced polymer) composite cables for prestressing systems has gained increasing attention. In fact, FRPs are characterized by high stiffness-to-weight ratios, admirable lightness, mechanical strength, and resistance to environmental agents.
FRPs are usually tailored using a wide range of materials, such as aramid, glass, or carbon, combined with thermosetting resins as epoxy, vinylester, or polyester, to obtain a product with better properties than the single components. Corresponding products are aramid-fiber-reinforced polymers (ARFPs), glass-fiber-reinforced polymers (GFRPs), and carbon-fiber-reinforced polymers (CFRPs) [
1,
2,
3]. Recently, research also moved attention to include nanoparticles of various materials into FRPs to enhance mechanical properties, fatigue resistance, thermal properties, and flame retardancy [
4,
5]. This also created the opportunity to conceive reinforced polymers with sustainable natural fibres, such as cotton, banana, jute, kenaf, hemp, coir (from coconuts), and sisal (from agave) in place of synthetic ones [
6].
As far as composite cables are concerned, their commercial names are Parafil
®, Arapree, FiBRA and Technora (ARFP cables), Polystal
® (GFRP tendons), the carbon fiber Leadline™ and CFCC (Carbon Fiber Composite Cables) [
7,
8,
9], and their mechanical properties are mainly linked to the type of fibers. A relatively wide range of Young modulus (E) and strength (
fu) values can be found in AFRP cables: (1) Parafil
® -type A ropes exhibit values of E ≈ 10 GPa and
fu = 0.6 GPa, that increase until type G ropes (E ≈ 126 GPa and
fu = 1.9 GPa) [
10]; (2) Arapree and FiBRA are characterized by E ≈ 65 GPa and
fu ≈ 1.35 GPa and (3) Technora cables have moderate stiffness (E = 54 GPa), but the highest strength (
fu = 2.14 GPa) [
8]. The GFRP tendon Polystal
® [
9] is characterized by E = 51 GPa and
fu = 1.5 GPa, while Leadline™ (E = 147 GPa and
fu = 2.6 GPa) and CFCCs (E = 137 GPa and
fu = 2.1 GPa) show similar values [
8]. Regarding the environmental resistance [
8], FiBRA cables can reach a breaking load equal to the nominal failure load (
Pu) after 11 months in alkaline solution under an applied load of 0.6
Pu, while (1) CFCCs reach 0.93
Pu after 1500 days in a NaOH (0.4%) and NaCl (3.5%) solution under a load of 0.6
Pu and (2) Leadline™ reaches the
Pu after 365 days in a NaCl (5%) solution. From the point of view of fatigue resistance, AFRP Technora, FiBRA, and Arapree can undergo [
8] 2.0 × 10
6 cycles without failure under an applied load of 0.51
Pu, 0.50
Pu, and 0.40
Pu, respectively, within a respective load range of ±0.13
Pu, ±0.29
Pu, and ±0.15
Pu, Polystal
® [
9] cables reach 0.50
Pu after 3.3 × 10
7 cycles to failure under a load range of ±0.034
Pu and Leadline™ and CFCCs reach [
8] 0.69
Pu after, respectively, 10 × 10
6 cycles at ±0.08
Pu and 2.0 × 10
6 at ±0.16
Pu. Among them, the carbon fiber cables exhibit the highest mechanical performance [
11] and costs and they can be found in most civil structural engineering works, although solutions with AFRP and GFRP tendons have also been adopted [
2]. However, a GFRP/CFRP hybrid cable, which inherits affordability of GFRP and the excellent mechanical properties of CFRP, has been introduced [
12], but it suffers hard exposure conditions, such as high temperature and pressure, more than its raw materials [
13].
Starting from the eighties, the design of new prestressed concrete bridges gave a great opportunity for pioneering applications of prestressed CFRP cables: (1) the new single-span Shinmiya Bridge (1988) in Japan was the first bridge in the world to adopt carbon fiber composite cables (CFCC) for the prestressed concrete girders, as a solution against the corrosion induced by the salinity of seasonal wind [
2,
14]; (2) the two-span highway prestressed-concrete Calgary Bridge in Canada, opened to traffic in 1993, has thirteen prestressed concrete girders. Among them, four were prestressed with CFCCs and two with Leadline™ rods [
2]. In the early 1990s, researchers started to focus on the use of carbon fiber tendons as stays for cable-stayed bridges. Except for the full-GFRP Aberfeldy footbridge (1993, Scotland) [
15], where AFRP Parafil
® cables were used as stays, subsequent solutions mainly involved CFRP cables [
16]: (1) a combination of CFCC 7-wire tendons and indented Leadline™ rods were used for the 24 stays of the Tsukuba full-FRP pedestrian bridge (1996, Japan), supposed to be the first CFRP cable structure in the world; (2) Leadline™ cables, with different numbers of rods, were also chosen in Zhenjiang (2005, China) for the CFRP cable-stayed footbridge in Jiangsu University; (3) hybrid solutions with the choice of steel and CFRP cables can be found in the Stork Bridge (1996, Switzerland), which was the first highway bridge with CFRP cables, and the Penobscot Narrows Bridge (2006, USA), where two steel strands were replaced with CFRP strands in three selected cables. Recently, a full-GFRP cable-stayed footbridge [
17] was conceived and the design included the use of eighty 12mm-diameter pultruded-CFRP cables [
11] as stays.
Nonetheless, the hardest task is the conceptualization of the system to anchor the prestressed FRP cable which consists of orthotropic unidirectional materials, characterized by a lower transversal stiffness and strength, as well as brittle failure. These make it particularly challenging to pursue the design goals, which are: (1) exploiting the maximum capacity of the FRP tendons; (2) minimizing the slippage of the cable and stress concentrations on the cable portion comprised in the anchorage.
Successful solutions for anchoring FRP tendons have been bonded and split-wedge anchorages so far. Bonded anchorages consist of a hollow cylindrical steel socket, either tapered or not, filled with resin or mortar, which adheres to the element interfaces. If the anchorage is not tapered, only bonding forces between contact surfaces and the filling material oppose the cable tension, while in tapered devices, the cable is held by friction forces, consequent to normal pressure, which act at the interface between the cable and potting material. Such devices were specifically introduced for FRP tendons, due to the lower elasticity modulus of the potting grout than that of metallic wedges: the potting technology can help to reduce the magnitude of pressure at the cable interface, but anchorages need greater anchor lengths. A further improvement (Meier et al. [
18,
19]) considered the use of load transfer material (LTM). This material has a variable modulus of elasticity that can avoid stress peak superpositions on the cable.
Alternatively, wedged anchorage systems can be selected. These systems date back to the 20th century [
20], when they were used for anchoring metallic rods or tendons in prestressed reinforced concrete. Worth mentioning are the Freyssinet and Magnel anchorages, widespread in Europe, or the Morandi and Rinaldi systems, particularly used in Italy. American anchorages, such as the Gifford Udall and Stressteel devices, stood out to be split-wedge steel anchorages. This peculiarity has been preserved within recent applications for FRP tendons. Split-wedge devices are composed of two or more wedges and a hollow steel barrel, whose inner surface is tapered. Here, a portion of cable is arranged inside the barrel and it is then blocked by wedges. The slippage of the cable is restrained by normal pressure, which is transferred to its external surface by wedges, and consequent friction forces at the interface between the cable and wedges. However, both bonded and split-wedge models highlight drawbacks and limitations. In fact, the excessive creep of potting mortar, induced by the ambient temperature, may induce a loss of performance over time, although a potted system with good creep behavior has been introduced [
21], while nonoptimal wedges can cause either an excessive pinching at the loading end of the cable or the slippage of the cable.
Focusing on split-wedge systems for FRP cables, modifications to the traditional anchorages for steel tendons are requested due to their high tilting angles, usually in the order of 5–7° [
22] and small anchoring lengths. The experimental tensile test [
11] on a CFRP tendon blocked through a traditional anchorage highlighted the premature slippage of the cable. Improvements proposed in the literature so far mainly concerned the shape of barrel/wedge interface, that governs the magnitude and distribution of the stress components on the cable. Sayed-Ahmed and Shrive (1998) [
23,
24], Schmidt et al. (2011) [
25], and Terrasi et al. (2011) [
26] proposed a split-wedge anchorage for CFRP cables adopting a differential angle for the barrel/wedge contact surface. Such solutions satisfactorily facilitated the reduction in the wedging effect at the loaded end of the cable.
The same goal was efficiently fulfilled by the anchorage device of Al-Mayah et al. (2006) [
27], who introduced a circular profile for the interface between barrel and wedges, which was proposed again by Heydarinouri et al. (2021) [
28]. The efficience of curved interfaces was also employed by Gribniak et al. (2019) [
29], who devised, with the help of the 3D-printing technique, a full shear-grip curved anchorage inspired by the
Nautilus shell profile for CFRP strips.
Research efforts aimed (Damiani et al. [
11]) to investigate the validity of an optimized steel anchorage, for CFRP cables, having a double-tilted surface for the wedges: experimental tensile tests highlighted the efficiency of the device.
The presented optimized split-wedge anchorage forms the core of the present paper, which is devoted to the numerical studies of the system by nonlinear finite element analyses.
2. Conceptualization and Review of Split-Wedge Anchorages
According to the literature, anchorages for FRP cables can be divided into bonded and mechanical, which contain the split-wedge systems. A review of bonded anchorages is provided in [
11], while principles are illustrated in [
30], where a hybrid bonded/split-wedge anchorage is also presented. Split-wedge anchorages are composed of (
Figure 1): (1) an external tapered-steel barrel; (2) two or more wedges and (3) the FRP cable, often protected by metallic sleeves (made of aluminum or copper), which envelope the cable portions arranged inside the wedges. Sleeves also contribute to a uniform distribution of pressure.
Split-wedge systems for FRP cables descend from those traditionally used for metallic bars since the beginning of the last century. The cable is held inside wedges by the normal pressure and the consequent friction forces, which act on contact surfaces: once the cable is pulled, wedges provide a passive pressure to the cable by sliding on the tilted inner surface of the barrel, and tangential forces occur at the interface due to the friction.
The tilting angle and friction properties of the wedge–barrel interface play a crucial role in the radial stress distribution in the cable. Analytical simplified models available in the literature are useful to show the basic principles which govern the behavior of split-wedge anchorages. The two-dimensional static model (
Figure 2a) by Campbell et al. (1997), reported in [
31,
32], considers the equilibrium of forces, which act on interfaces of half of the anchorage, due to the cable pull.
Figure 2b details the forces at play on the interfaces. The equilibrium of friction forces on wedge (
Figure 2c) holds
where
is the friction force between cable and wedge,
and
are the vertical tangential components of
and
respectively, and
is the tilting angle of the barrel/wedge interface. Equation (1) can be rewritten as
Rearranging Equation (2), the expression of the resultant force on half of the wedge-barrel is
Knowing
, the normal resultant force on the cable can be analogously found as
Plots of
(Equation (6)) normalized over
are shown in
Figure 3 by varying values of
, within the range 3° ÷ 6°, and
, within the range 0.1 ÷ 0.25. From
Figure 3a,b, it can be stated that
decreases with increasing the angle (
) and the coefficient of friction between the barrel and wedge (
), due to two reasons: (1) a greater angle would reduce the sum of the horizontal components of
and
(
Figure 2c), and the magnitude of
accordingly; (2) higher friction at the interface would give rise to a smaller horizontal component of
[
33], and consequently to a reduced
.
Clearly, for an efficient system, an optimal tradeoff between normal forces and friction should be adopted, based on the requested performance. Further on, other variables, such as the sleeve manufacturing, surface treatment or finishing contribute to the actual anchorage efficiency [
34,
35].
For the sake of completeness, it is worth mentioning other analytical models from the literature, useful to define the stress state in the cable: (1) the model of Robitaille (1999) [
36], (2) the model of Persson (1964) [
37], which was applied in [
38], and (3) the model of Xie et al. (2015) [
39].
2.1. Traditional Split-Wedge Anchorages
Anchorage systems for post-tensioning metallic bars have old origins. The first patent of a wedged anchorage for metallic bars was proposed at the beginning of the 20th century by Eugène Freyssinet (France). This paved the way to other concepts, later introduced all around the world, which are reported below.
2.1.1. The Freyssinet Anchorages
Freyssinet patented two systems [
20]: (1) a wedged anchorage (
Figure 4a) for two metallic rods (1907) and (2) a reinforced-concrete anchorage (1935), reported in
Figure 4b, that allowed the simultaneous blockage of multiple bars (2, 3, 12, or 18). This model was composed of a grooved conical plug (with a number of notches equal to the number of rods) and a cylindrical barrel. Both parts of this device were entirely made of concrete: the barrel was reinforced with a double-spiral steel reinforcement at both the inner and outer surface. Bars were passed through the hollow cylinder and then blocked by the grooved plug.
2.1.2. The Rinaldi System
Rinaldi (Italy), proposed [
20] a system composed (
Figure 5) of a circular, thick bearing steel plate with multiple tapered holes. One couple of rods were passed through each hole and then blocked by grooved steel plug.
2.1.3. The Morandi System
Morandi (Italy) proposed and patented [
20] a system, for two steel rods, that differs from the Rinaldi system by the notched tapered holes in the bearing plate. A later enhancement introduced one more rod for each hole, with a total number of three rods. The plug was grooved with three notches here. Another model by the author was the wedged anchorage for four cables (
Figure 6).
2.1.4. The Magnel System
The Belgian Magnel (
Figure 7) [
20] anchorage was composed of a hollow bearing plate integral to the concrete, which supported other steel plates called “sandwich”. These were grooved to accommodate the steel rods, which were pulled two at a time and then blocked by steel plugs. This device allowed the realization of cables with many bars: 64-bar cables having a diameter of 7 mm each.
2.1.5. The Gifford Udall System
The American Gifford Udall (
Figure 8a) consists [
20] of: (1) a barrel typically ≈2 cm wide and ≈2.54 cm long; (2) two half wedges with indented inner-surface and (3) rods up to a diameter of 7 mm.
2.1.6. The Stressteel Co. System
The Stressteel system (
Figure 8b) [
20] descended from the British Lee McCall model and it was composed of two half wedges. Unlike the Gifford Udall anchorage, this device used a steel bearing plate with a tapered hole as a socket for the wedges. Moreover, the bar, having a diameter of 26 mm, was protected by a metallic sheath.
2.2. Optimized Split-Wedge Anchorages for FRP Cables
Split-wedge anchorages recently designed for FRP cables have preserved properties found in traditional devices, as those widespread in USA. Models proposed in the literature so far were fundamentally tailored for CFRP bars with a diameter below 10 mm. The optimized anchorage device investigated by the authors [
11] uses a 12 mm-diameter CFRP bar, that could be considered a novelty.
Proposed optimized systems can be classified based on the barrel and wedge shapes that can be either straight or curved, having or not differential angles. Performance of optimized anchorage systems, moreover, should need to be experimentally and numerically validated, as reported in the scientific literature. The following subsections aim to outline aspects of the numerical modelling of anchorages by reviewing choices adopted by authors so far, as well as the results of numerical assessments.
2.2.1. Differentially Angled Interfaces
Sayed-Ahmed and Shrive (1998) [
23] proposed a split four-wedge system (
Figure 9) for ϕ = 8 mm Leadline™ cables adopting a differential angle for barrel and wedge, respectively, tilted at 1.99° and 2.09°. Results of tensile tests highlighted a maximum failure load of 124 kN, which was higher than the nominal ultimate load of the cable. Regarding the fatigue strength, the system could undergo a maximum number of cycles equal to 2.42 × 10
6. A finite element model was implemented in order to assess the stress distribution along the FRP cable. Eight-node isoparametric elements were used for the anchorage and the cable, while interface elements were used along the contact surface lines. Values of coefficients of friction equal to 0.5 and 0.05 were adopted for wedge/cable and barrel/wedge contacts, respectively. Two different models were implemented: (1) a linear model, considering linear elastic materials for each component, and (2) a nonlinear model, introducing the plastic behavior of the steel parts. Analyses were carried out in three load steps: (1) simulation of the wedge seating by applying a displacement on the top surface; (2) release of the applied displacement; (3) application of the tensile force to the CFRP cable. Results of nonlinear analyses at the end of the third step highlighted that all the stress components (radial, shear, and longitudinal) had peak values at the loading end of the cable, while linear analyses returned stress profiles with peaks at different locations. Campbell et al. (2000) [
31] implemented a finite element model of the anchorage reported in [
23], adopting linear elastic materials, to assess the influence of (1) different values of coefficient of friction (0.05, 0.1, 0.2, and 0.3) and (2) differential angles between barrel and wedge (0, 0.06, 0.11, and 0.2) on the stress distribution along the tendon, assuming a coefficient of friction between wedge and CFRP tendon equal to 0.4 and without providing any preset load. The main results were: (1) radial stress in the cable increases with decreasing the coefficient of friction. Clearly, lower friction requires higher normal pressure to ensure the equilibrium at the same level of tensile force. (2) Adopting coefficients of friction of 0.2 and 0.4 for barrel–wedge and wedge–tendon contacts, respectively, a differential angle of 0° returns a radial stress distribution, which reaches a value of 220 MPa. With increasing the differential angle, the free end of the cable tends to unload, until reaching zero radial stress for a value of 0.2°, which means that no contact exists between the barrel and wedge.
Schmidt et al. (2010) [
25] introduced a split three-wedge anchorage (
Figure 10) for ϕ = 8 mm CFRP rods characterized by a unique sleeve-wedge element, having a differential angle of 0.4° with the inner surface of barrel (tilted at 3°). The aluminum sleeve-wedge part was obtained by notching three radial slits on the wedge body: (1) one fully separates two wedges, giving rise to a gap; (2) the other two slits leave 1 mm walls, in contact with the rod, which connect the three wedges. Such solution can maximize the gripping surface and provide a more uniform radial stress distribution around the cable surface. Tensile tests performed on five specimens returned failure loads ranging from 142 kN to 149 kN, which turned out to be greater than the manufacturer’s mean value (120 kN). Schmidt et al. (2011) [
40] numerically simulated, with the Abaqus software [
41], the anchorage through a nonlinear 3D finite element model. Hexahedral elements were used to discretize both the CFRP rod and the barrel, and tetrahedral elements for the sleeve-wedge system. The FEM model accounted for the plastic behavior of the barrel and wedges and anisotropic elastic properties of the CFRP rod. The barrel/wedge and wedge/rod interfaces were modeled with a surface-to-surface discretization, adopting a finite sliding formulation [
41] and a penalty friction [
42]. Finite element analyses were performed on one half of the model, due to the symmetry, and results in terms of circumferential strains on the outer surface of the barrel were compared with the experimental ones, elaborated by an ARAMIS 3D optical measurement system. Strain profiles highlighted maximum values at the wedge gap. Moreover, variation in the transverse elastic modulus of the rod from 2000 MPa to 7600 MPa did not seem to greatly afflict strains at the slit and gap, except for the barrel surface comprised in between. Contact pressure on the CFRP rod also exhibited greater values at the unloaded end of the anchorage and magnitudes close to zero at the loaded end.
The thermoplastic polyphenylene sulfide (PPS) polymer wedges were adopted in conjunction with a sand-coated CFRP tendon (ϕ = 5.4 mm) by Terrasi et al. (2011) [
26] (
Figure 11) to design a split-wedge anchorage. A first model was subjected to static tensile tests, highlighting an average failure strength 58.7% less than the tendon’s tensile strength, equal to 2000 MPa. Then, an optimized model was designed by adopting: (1) a differential angle of 0.23° between the barrel and wedge; (2) a longer wedge and barrel and (3) local modifications (chamfers). Tensile tests on the optimized anchorage showed an average failure strength 25% greater than the first system. Abaqus finite element analyses [
41] were utilized to assess the stress distribution on the CFRP rod and to perform the design optimization. A 3D finite element model of one sixth of the anchorage was implemented due to the symmetry, and simulations were performed by applying a tensile stress of 1000 MPa to the cable. Contacts at interfaces were defined through the node-to-surface formulation: (1) contact between the sand-coated rod and wedge was modeled as soft contact, assigning a user-defined constitutive curve iteratively defined based on a compression test result on the rod; (2) a low friction coefficient was assigned to the barrel–wedge interface due to the application of lubricant. Finite element results showed a better performance with respect of the unoptimized system: (1) radial stress, albeit preserving a similar magnitude, had the peak value moved to the unloaded end of the cable; (2) shear stress on the cable surface, having a flatter distribution, denoted a reduction of the 25% and (3) cable axial stress was 10% lower.
2.2.2. Curved Interfaces
Al-Mayah et al. (2006) [
27] introduced a split four-wedge steel anchorage (
Figure 12) for CFRP cables characterized by a circular profile between the inner surface of the barrel and the external surface of wedges, that were shaped with the same radius. Experimental tests were performed by varying cable diameters (ϕ = 6.4 mm and ϕ = 9.4 mm), the seating distance of wedges from the loading end of the system, and the radius of the circular interface. Results showed that: (1) higher values of the radius increase the displacement of the rod and (2) no premature failure occurred. Authors also performed finite element analyses in order to determine the stress state inside the anchorage [
43]. A first 3D nonlinear model was implemented using eight-node linear brick elements for the components, except for the inner layer of the rod, that was modeled through six-node triangular elements. Materials were considered linear elastic and the friction coefficients adopted were: (1) 0.0 ÷ 0.02 for the barrel/wedge interface, due to the lubrication; (2) 0.4 for the sleeve/wedge interface and (3) 0.24 for the sleeve/rod interface, obtained by experimental pull-out tests. The results highlighted that: (1) the radial stress peak are located near the free end of the cable; (2) as the radius increases, the contact pressure decreases along the rod length, approximately maintaining the same profile.
Heydarinouri et al. (2021), similarly to [
27], proposed and tested [
28] a curved split-wedge anchorage (
Figure 13) for CFRP rods (ϕ = 8 mm), but with aluminum wedges and removal of the sleeve between the cable and wedges. Tensile tests on the system returned a breaking load 16% greater than the cable ultimate load, while fatigue tests highlighted that no rupture occurred within 2.0 × 10
6 cycles, although slippage between the wedges and cable occurred in some specimens. The proposed system was numerically modeled [
44] in the Abaqus software [
41] and parametric analyses were carried out considering: (1) differential angles, between barrel and wedges, of 0.1°, 0.16°, and 0.23°; (2) different fillets (circular and straight) at the tip of wedges for a differential angle equal to 0.1°. Materials were treated as linear elastic, except for the aluminum of wedges, which was provided with plastic behavior. Contact surfaces were modeled through a surface-to-surface discretization, with the finite sliding formulation. A “hard contact” behavior [
41] was assigned to the normal behavior, while the penalty formulation [
42] was adopted for the tangential behavior, adopting a coefficient of friction equal to 0.19 and 0.3 for the wedge–barrel and rod–wedge interfaces, respectively. The main results were: (1) by increasing the differential angle from 0.1° to 0.23°, the peak value of contact pressure decreases at the loading end of the CFRP cable; (2) the modified anchor, either with round (radius of 4 mm) or straight fillets (cut angle of 40°), exhibited a reduced contact pressure at the tip of the wedges; (3) the Tsai–Wu failure criterion [
45] was adopted to establish the optimum design among the proposed models and the Tsai–Wu failure index was calculated based on the stress state of the CFRP cable. The maximum index (2.25) was found in the model with constant differential angle equal to 0.1°, but fillets could reduce it to 1.37. Curved anchorage showed the minimum failure index, and it was thus chosen as the optimal design.
In conclusion, the works regarding anchorage models for FRP cables proposed so far aim to mitigate the stress state in the cable, whilst exhibiting high efficiency, which is defined as the ratio between the system and the cable capacity. Cables with a diameter within 8 mm have been mainly adopted and stress states obtained through numerical analyses generally cannot be extended to the system investigated here.
Thus, the present work aims to provide a specific definition of the contact relationships at interfaces, based on the performed experimental tests on the anchorages for ϕ = 12 mm cables.
3. The Optimized Double-Angle Split-Wedge Anchorage
Traditional anchorages for steel cables are usually conceived with differential angles between the barrel and wedges. An example, for a 0.5 inch cable, is reported in
Figure 14a: (1) the contact surface between barrel and wedges, both made of steel, is smooth; (2) angles are equal to 5.2° (inner barrel surface) and 6° (external wedge surface). As previously reported, anchorages with differential angles have been also designed for CFRP cables so far: (1) a differential angle of 0.1° (
Figure 9) has been assumed in [
23], where the barrel and wedge are tilted at 1.99° and 2.09°; (2) a differential angle of 0.4° (
Figure 10) was proposed in [
25], where the inner surface of the barrel is tilted at 3°; (3) a differential angle of 0.23° (
Figure 11) was adopted in [
26]; (4) a curved anchorage (
Figure 13) was introduced in [
27] and also presented in [
28], where numerical analyses highlighted that, with increasing the differential angle from 0.1° to 0.23°, the peak value of contact pressure at the loaded end of the CFRP cable decreases.
Further on, the authors investigated [
11] two solutions of a split-wedge steel anchorage, whose geometry (
Figure 14b) was conceived and optimized [
46] through preliminary finite element analyses, which aimed to predict global results. The selected cables were made of pultruded CFRP (PCFRP) produced by CARBONVENETA: (1) the diameter is 12 mm; (2) the mean elastic modulus along the fiber direction is 164 GPa, evaluated by the manufacturer according to the ISO 10406-1:2015 standards [
47]; (3) the mean nominal axial strength is equal to 2275 MPa; (4) the cable surface was treated to improve the grip. Further on, the portions included into wedges were protected by two 1mm-thick aluminum sheaths, with a length of ≈15 mm, glued to the cable through Sika ADEKIT H9952 BK [
48] epoxy resin. The steel parts were composed of: (1) a 100 mm-long steel barrel with inner surface tilted at 3°; (2) three 100 mm wedges, assuming two different configurations, denoted as single angle (SA) and double angle (DA). A constant angle of 3° was adopted in the SA solution, while in the DA solution, 25% (25 mm) of the external surfaces of wedges was tilted at 3° and the remaining 75% (75 mm) at 3.1°, giving rise to a differential angle of 0.1° with the barrel. Steels adopted for the barrel and wedges and properties provided by the producer were, respectively: (1) C45 (E = 220 GPa;
fy = 395 MPa;
fu = 649 MPa); (2) 16CrNi4Pb (E = 220 GPa;
fy = 667.8 MPa;
fu = 694.3 MPa).
The aluminum sheath and resin were subjected to tensile tests in order to obtain the main mechanical properties for the numerical models, while traditional and the SA and DA anchorages were both experimentally tested [
11] and numerically analyzed. The test methods are reported in the following subsection, together with the numerical models proposed here.
3.1. Test Methods
Specimens were subjected to tensile tests at the laboratory of the Department of Structural and Geotechnical Engineering (Sapienza University of Rome). Specifically, one specimen of the aluminum sleeve (h = 50 cm) and a rectangular strip (h = 30 cm, w = 3 cm, and t = 0.4 cm) of resin were first tested (
Figure 15a,b and
Figure 16a,b) through a Zwick Roell testing machine. Longitudinal and transversal strains were acquired by means of a pair of 6 mm strain gauges (Tokyo Sokki Kenkyujo Co., Ltd., Tokyo, Japan) applied at the center of the specimens (
Figure 16a,b) for each side, in the case of the resin strip. As far as the aluminum test is concerned, a force-controlled procedure was implemented with a constant rate of 2 kN/min and the two ends included inside the clamps were reinforced by two pieces of PCFRP cable, as long as the clamps (l = 10 cm), glued with the epoxy resin inside the inner hole. A tensile test on the resin sheet was performed, on the other hand, by applying a constant displacement rate of 4 mm/min.
Tests on the anchorages were carried out on 1 traditional and 5 optimized (3 SA and 2 DA) specimens through a MTS testing machine. A displacement-controlled procedure was adopted by setting a constant displacement rate of 4 mm/min and, moreover, without assigning a presetting load.
In the traditional anchorage, top and bottom barrels were placed on a threaded bearing ring and then encased into two hollow steel cylinders (
Figure 17a) following two stages: (1) the bearing ring was first screwed to the cylinder; (2) the hollow cylinder was then screwed to the loading head of the MTS machine. Here, force and displacements were acquired by the MTS machine.
The setup of the new optimized anchorage specimens (
Figure 17b) was composed of: (1) two pairs of perforated steel plates, with thickness of 40 mm, connected to each other through two pairs of four high-strength bolts (ϕ = 16 mm). The outer plates at the top and bottom anchorages were first passed through the threaded machine heads and then fastened by two threaded rings; (2) CFRP cables, with a length of 600 mm, inserted throughout the plate holes and then fastened through the anchorages.
Displacements of the five optimized anchorages (SA and DA) were obtained through a digital image correlation (DIC) code [
49] by an “IO Industries” system that includes a camera “FLARE” and a digital video recorder “DVR Express
® Core 2”, according to the setup in
Figure 18. Visible parts of the five tested specimens, to be tracked by the DIC software, were first randomly speckled. The monitored parts were: (1) the free length of the cable comprised between the two steel plates for one test and (2) the outermost part of the visible top wedge for the other four tests.
3.2. Numerical Models
Numerical analyses of the anchorage presented here were performed through the finite element method (FEM), using the software Abaqus [
41]. Traditional, SA and DA anchorages were modeled (
Figure 19a,b) through C3D8R elastic brick elements having isotropic material for all the subsystems, with exception of the cable considered orthotropic. The testing load was simulated by imposing a fixed displacement to the cable end, having restrained the barrel bottom surface (
Figure 20).
Young moduli (E, GPa) and Poisson coefficients (
ν) of anchorage materials adopted in the analysis are shown in
Table 1 and
Table 2: (1) steel properties of barrel (C45) and wedges (16CrNi4Pb) refer to the producer values; (2) aluminum properties are the design values provided by the Eurocode 9 [
50] (E = 70 GPa and
ν = 0.3). Such properties can be obtained from a stress level equal to the 25% and 50% of the tensile strength in
Figure 21a, respectively; (3) resin properties were experimentally evaluated (
Figure 21b) and they are extracted from a stress level of 25% of the tensile strength; (4) PCFRP properties are those provided by the producer and the assumed material directions pertain to the reference system in
Figure 22.
Contacting part surfaces (
Figure 23) were connected to each other by means of surface-to-surface contacts.
A
hard contact is defined along the normal direction for all the contact pairs, with the exception of the barrel/wedge interface. Here, a
soft contact is assumed imposing a relationship between the acting pressure and the current overclosure. Both the hard contact and Coulomb friction behavior have been enforced through the penalty method [
42], which allows a small amount of both penetration along the normal direction and tangential displacement, in the stick condition, before the attainment of the critical Coulomb shear stress.
Slips are neglected when a specific option, named
rough, is adopted based on the experimental evidence. Relative motion between two paired surfaces has been evaluated through the finite-sliding tracking approach [
41]. Forces occurring between two paired surfaces are split according to: (1) tangential and (2) normal directions.
The adopted strategies are summarized in
Table 3 for the traditional and optimized anchorages, respectively, while the adopted pressure/overclosure relationship is reported in
Figure 24a,b: it is worth noticing that these curves are consequent to a numerical investigation aimed to minimize the differences between numerical and experimental results.