MyJournals Home  

RSS FeedsMaterials, Vol. 12, Pages 3356: Experimental Tests on Fiber-Reinforced Alkali-Activated Concrete Beams Under Flexure: Some Considerations on the Behavior at Ultimate and Serviceability Conditions (Materials)

 
 

15 october 2019 15:02:39

 
Materials, Vol. 12, Pages 3356: Experimental Tests on Fiber-Reinforced Alkali-Activated Concrete Beams Under Flexure: Some Considerations on the Behavior at Ultimate and Serviceability Conditions (Materials)
 


Alkali-activated concrete (AAC) is an alternative concrete typology whose innovative feature, compared to ordinary concrete, is represented by the use of fly ash as a total replacement of Portland cement. Fly ash combined with an alkaline solution and cured at high temperature reacts to form a geopolymeric binder. The growing interest in using AACs for structural applications comes from the need of reducing the global demand of Portland cement, whose production is responsible for about 9% of global anthropogenic CO2 emissions. Some research studies carried out in the last few years have proved the ability of AAC to replace ordinary Portland cement concrete in different structural applications including the construction of beams and panels. On the contrary, few experimental results concerning the structural effectiveness of fiber-reinforced AAC are currently available. The present paper presents the results of an experimental program carried out to investigate the flexural behavior of full-scale AAC beams reinforced with conventional steel rebars, in combination with fibers uniformly spread within the concrete matrix. The experimental study included two beams containing 25 kg/m3 (0.3% in volume) of high-strength steel fibers and two beams reinforced with 3 kg/m3 (0.3% in volume) of synthetic fibers. A reference beam not containing fibers was also tested. The discussion of the experimental results focuses on some aspects significant for the structural behavior at ultimate limit states (ULS) and serviceability limit states (SLS). The discussion includes considerations on the flexural capacity and ductility of the test specimens. About the behavior at the SLS, the influence of fiber addition on the tension stiffening mechanism is discussed, together with the evolution of post-cracking stiffness and of the mean crack spacing. The latter is compared with the analytical predictions provided by different formulations developed over the past 40 years and adopted by European standards.


 
184 viewsCategory: Chemistry, Physics
 
Materials, Vol. 12, Pages 3357: Comparison of Concrete Creep in Compression, Tension, and Bending under Drying Condition (Materials)
Materials, Vol. 12, Pages 3354: Effective Synthesis of Carbon Hybrid Materials Containing Oligothiophene Dyes (Materials)
 
 
blog comments powered by Disqus


MyJournals.org
The latest issues of all your favorite science journals on one page

Username:
Password:

Register | Retrieve

Search:

Physics


Copyright © 2008 - 2024 Indigonet Services B.V.. Contact: Tim Hulsen. Read here our privacy notice.
Other websites of Indigonet Services B.V.: Nieuws Vacatures News Tweets Nachrichten