Influence of Geometric Curvature on the Out-Of-lane flexural capacity of Unreinforced Masonry Walls.
Influence of Geometric Curvature on the Out-Of-lane flexural capacity of Unreinforced Masonry Walls.
Date
2025-12-08
Authors
Yiga, John Mary Joseph
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
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Publisher
Makerere University
Abstract
Unreinforced masonry (URM) remains a prevalent construction system in Uganda and
numerous regions worldwide, yet its susceptibility to out-of-plane (OOP) loading continues to
precipitate some of the most abrupt and severe structural failures. Existing analytical
frameworks and design provisions are predominantly based on straight, planar walls, leaving
curved wall configurations, ubiquitous in both architectural practice and vernacular
construction, insufficiently characterized within prevailing theory. This study interrogates the
combined influence of geometrical configuration and material properties on the flexural
resistance of URM walls subjected to OOP loading. Laboratory characterization of locally
manufactured clay bricks and selected mortar mixes revealed pronounced variability in
stiffness relative to compressive strength, reflecting heterogeneous microstructural features and
production inconsistencies. While augmented mortar strength enhanced compressive
performance, its effect on unit-mortar interface friction remained marginal, highlighting
persistent limitations in bond behaviour. These empirically derived parameters were
incorporated into a finite element model developed in ABAQUS and validated against
published experimental benchmarks and mathematical metrics, successfully reproducing crack
initiation, stiffness degradation, and ultimate failure mechanisms.
Parametric analyses revealed that straight walls exhibit predominantly bending-dominated
responses, wherein improved mortar grades elevate load capacity without altering the
governing failure mode. Conversely, curved walls manifested fundamentally distinct structural
behaviour: increasing projection distance markedly improved OOP strength and initial stiffness
through the development of compressive thrust lines and an enlarged effective lever armphenomena not adequately captured by classical plate theory. Geometry-induced arching
conferred performance gains even for lower-grade mortars, whereas higher-grade mortars
accentuated this effect, albeit with reduced ultimate displacement. Using projection height as
a practical geometric descriptor, a simplified expression is proposed to estimate the flexural
capacity of curved URM walls, providing an accessible alternative to full numerical modelling.
Collectively, the findings underscore wall geometry as a dominant, geometry-driven resilience
mechanism operating synergistically with material enhancements, challenging the
conventional reliance on planar bending theory for predicting URM OOP behaviour.
Description
A dissertation submitted to the Directorate of Research and Graduate Training in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the award of the degree of Master of Science in Civil Engineering of Makerere University.
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Citation
Yiga, John Mary Joseph. (2025). Influence of Geometric Curvature on the Out-Of-lane flexural capacity of Unreinforced Masonry Walls. (Unpublished Master’s Dissertation) Makerere University; Kampala, Uganda.