Title of article :
Experimental and finite element analysis on the steel fiber-reinforced concrete (SFRC) beams ultimate behavior
Author/Authors :
?zcan، نويسنده , , D. Mehmet and Bayraktar، نويسنده , , Alemdar and ?ahin، نويسنده , , Abdurrahman and Haktanir، نويسنده , , Tefaruk and Türker، نويسنده , , Temel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages :
14
From page :
1064
To page :
1077
Abstract :
Steel fiber-added reinforced concrete (SFRC) applications have become widespread in areas such as higher upper layers, tunnel shells, concrete sewer pipes, and slabs of large industrial buildings. Usage of SFRC in load-carrying members of buildings having conventional reinforced concrete (RC) frames is also gaining popularity recently because of its positive contribution to both energy absorption capacity and concrete strength. aper presents experimental and finite element analysis of three SFRC beams. For this purpose, three SFRC beams with 250 × 350 × 2000 mm dimensions are produced using a concrete class of C20 with 30 kg/m3 dosage of steel fibers and steel class S420 with shear stirrups. SFRC beams are subjected to bending by a four-point loading setup in certified beam-loading frame, exactly after having been moist-cured for 28 days. The tests are with control of loads. The beams are loaded until they are broken and the loadings are stopped when the tensile steel bars are broken into two pieces. Applied loads and mid-section deflections are carefully recorded at every 5 kN load increment from the beginning till the ultimate failure. the SFRC beams modeled by using nonlinear material properties adopted from experimental study is analyzed till the ultimate failure cracks by ANSYS. Eight-noded solid brick elements are used to model the concrete. Internal reinforcement is modeled by using 3D spar elements. A quarter of the full beam is taken into account in the modeling process. sults obtained from the finite element and experimental analyses are compared to each other. It is seen from the results that the finite element failure behavior indicates a good agreement with the experimental failure behavior.
Keywords :
Nonlinear analysis , Steel fiber-reinforced concrete , Beam failure , finite element modeling
Journal title :
Construction and Building Materials
Serial Year :
2009
Journal title :
Construction and Building Materials
Record number :
1629124
Link To Document :
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