4.5 Article

Compressive and cyclic flexural response of double-hooked-end steel fiber reinforced concrete

Journal

FRONTIERS OF STRUCTURAL AND CIVIL ENGINEERING
Volume 16, Issue 9, Pages 1104-1126

Publisher

HIGHER EDUCATION PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s11709-022-0845-x

Keywords

steel fiber reinforced concrete; fiber geometry; cyclic loading; energy dissipation; finite element modeling; inverse analysis

Funding

  1. MasterCard Foundation Scholars Program

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Recent developments in high-performance double-hooked-end steel fibers have expanded the applications of steel fiber reinforced concrete (SFRC). This study examined the compressive properties and cyclic flexural performance of SFRC with different volume fractions of double-hooked-end steel fibers. The results showed that increasing the volumetric ratio of the fibers improved the ductility, tensile strength, cyclic flexural strength, and energy dissipation characteristics of the SFRC. Additionally, using larger steel fibers enhanced the flexural strength and energy dissipation of the SFRC.
Recent developments on high-performance double-hooked-end steel fibers have enhanced the wide applications of steel fiber reinforced concrete (SFRC). This study presents the compressive properties and the cyclic flexural performance of the SFRC that were experimentally examined. Three different double-hooked-end steel fibers at 0.25%, 0.5%, 0.75%, and 1% volume fractions were considered. All fiber types had similar length to diameter ratios, while the first two fiber types had similar anchorage mechanisms (4D) and tensile strength and the third type had different anchorage mechanism (5D) and a higher tensile strength. The increased volumetric ratio of the fibers increased the post-peak compressive strain (ductility), the tensile strength, and the cyclic flexural strength and cumulative energy dissipation characteristics of the SFRC. Among the 4D fibers, the mixtures with the larger steel fibers showed higher flexural strength and more energy dissipation compared to the SFRCs with smaller size fibers. For 1% steel fiber dosage, 4D and 5D specimens showed similar cyclic flexural responses. Finally, a 3D finite element model that can predict the monotonic and cyclic flexural responses of the double-hooked-end SFRC was developed. The calibration process considered the results obtained from the inverse analysis to determine the tensile behavior of the SFRC.

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