Title of article
Effect of short, dispersed glass and carbon fibres on the behaviour of textile-reinforced concrete under tensile loading
Author/Authors
Yael Barhum، نويسنده , , Rabea and Mechtcherine، نويسنده , , Viktor، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
16
From page
56
To page
71
Abstract
This paper addresses the influence of the addition of short, dispersed fibres made of alkali-resistant (AR) glass and carbon on the fracture behaviour of textile-reinforced concrete (TRC). A series of uniaxial, deformation-controlled tension tests was performed to study the strength, deformation, and fracture behaviour of thin, narrow plates made of TRC with and without the addition of short fibres. Furthermore, multifilament-yarn pullout and single-fibre pullout tests were carried out to gain a better understanding of the crack-bridging behaviour which suppresses growth and widening of cracks. Pronounced enhancement of first-crack stress was achieved, the value increased by factors of 1.5 and 2 due to the addition of glass and carbon fibres, respectively. While more and finer cracks were observed on the specimens with short fibres added, a moderate improvement in tensile strength was recorded. Water-to-binder ratio influences the matrix–fibre bond quality and thus fibre failure mode. While fibre fracture dominated behaviour when matrix M030 (low water-to-binder ratio of 0.30) was used, pronounced pullout behaviour was observed for fibres embedded in the matrix with a higher w/b ratio (M045). Furthermore, it was found that short fibres can also improve the bond between multifilament-yarns and the surrounding matrix by means of new cross-links.
Keywords
Pullout tests , Tensile behaviour , Textile-reinforced concrete , Short dispersed fibre
Journal title
ENGINEERING FRACTURE MECHANICS
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
ENGINEERING FRACTURE MECHANICS
Record number
2343716
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