Experimental Model for Study of Thickness Effect on Flexural Fatigue Life of Macro-Synthetic-Fiber-Reinforced Concretes
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Published:2023-02-28
Issue:3
Volume:13
Page:642
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ISSN:2075-5309
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Container-title:Buildings
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Buildings
Author:
Daneshfar Mohammad1, Hassani Abolfazl1, Aliha Mohammad Reza Mohammad2, Sadowski Tomasz3ORCID, Karimi Arastoo4ORCID
Affiliation:
1. School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran 14115-111, Iran 2. Welding and Joining Research Center, School of Industrial Engineering, Iran University of Science and Technology (IUST), Narmak, Tehran 16846-13114, Iran 3. Department of Solid Mechanics, The Lublin University of Technology, Nadbystrzycka 40 Str., 20-216 Lublin, Poland 4. Politecnico di Torino, Corso Duca degli Abruzzi, 24, 10129 Torino, Italy
Abstract
As one of the most widely used building materials, concrete has a dominantly brittle or quasi-brittle behavior. Adding fibers to concrete affects its ductility behavior as well as some mechanical properties. Finding the relationship between the addition of fibers and the change in thickness of laboratory test samples made of concrete can help in designing the optimal thickness of real concrete layers (especially concrete pavements) to withstand dynamic loads. The purpose of this research is to provide an experimental model for investigating the effect of concrete specimen size, or the thickness effect of concrete sample, on the fatigue life of concrete. Accordingly, several concrete beams with three thicknesses (80, 100 and 150 mm), constant width, and two lengths (120 mm and 450 mm) were manufactured with fiber percentages of 0 and 4% by fraction volume. The employed fiber was twisted macro synthetic fiber. After curing for 28 days, the samples were subjected to fatigue loading at three stress levels until the onset of failure and cracking stage. Here, the experimental model of the relationship between the number of loading cycles, the stress level and the thickness of the sample is presented. The results show that increasing the specimen thickness and fiber content can enhance the fatigue life of concrete up to 68%.
Subject
Building and Construction,Civil and Structural Engineering,Architecture
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