4.7 Article

Seismic Performance of Recycled Aggregate Geopolymer Concrete-Filled Double Skin Tubular Columns with Internal Steel and External FRP Tube

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 14, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym14235204

Keywords

recycled aggregates; glass-FRP tube; seismic behavior; geopolymer; quasi-static load

Funding

  1. Deanship of Scientific Research at King Khalid University
  2. [RGP.1/221/43]

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The large production of cement and the disposal of waste have significant environmental impacts. Therefore, it is crucial to study and develop sustainable concrete construction materials and methods. This study investigates the seismic efficiency of innovative concrete structural elements and finds that the percentage substitution of recycled coarse aggregate has a minor impact on seismic performance, while the compression-load ratio has a substantial impact.
The large production of cement is resulting in a high-carbon footprint, which is essential to minimize for sustainable concrete construction. Moreover, the large quantity of recycled coarse aggregate (RCA) from the demolition of old concrete structures is creating problems for landfill and disposal. The primary goal of this study is to investigate the seismic efficiency of innovative fiber-reinforced polymer (FRP)-recycled aggregate geopolymer concrete (RAGC) steel-tubed columns (FGSTCs) with an internal steel tube (STT), an external glass-FRP tube (GLT), and RAGC located between the two-tubed components to develop a serviceable structural element. To study their seismic functioning under axial load and lateral repeated load, five FGSTC specimens were manufactured and analyzed under quasi-static loads. The influence of three variables on the performance of FGSTC specimens, consisting of STT reinforcing ratio, compression ratio, and recycled coarse aggregate (RCA) replacement ratio, was investigated in this investigation. The produced specimens' ductility, hysteretic loops, strain distribution, skeleton curves, stiffness functioning, energy capacity dissipation, damaging functioning, and strength loss were all assessed and discussed. The results of this investigation revealed that percentage substitution of RCA had a minor impact on the seismic functioning of FGSTCs; however, the compression-load ratio depicted a substantial impact. The energy loss of the FGSTCs was 24.5% higher than that of their natural aggregate equivalents. FGSTCs may have a 16.9% lower cumulative failure rate than their natural aggregate counterparts.

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