4.6 Article

Dynamic Fracture Behavior of Steel Fiber Reinforced Self-Compacting Concretes (SFRSCCs)

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 10, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma10111270

Keywords

steel fiber reinforced self-compacting concrete (SFRSCC); fiber content; drop-weight impact test; flexure; dynamic increase factor (DIF)

Funding

  1. INCRECYT program
  2. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad, Spain [BIA2015-68678-C2-1-R, BIA2014-54916-R]

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Three-point bending tests on notched beams of three types of steel fiber-reinforced self-compacting concrete (SFRSCC) have been performed by using both a servo-hydraulic machine and a drop-weight impact instrument. The lo ading rates had a range of six orders of magnitude from 2.20 x 10(-3) mm/s (quasi-static) to 2.66 x 10(3) mm/s. These SFRSCCs had the same matrix, but various types of steel fiber (straight and hooked-end) and contents (volume ratios), 0.51%, 0.77% and 1.23%, respectively. The results demonstrate that the fracture energy and the flexural strength increase as the loading rate increases. Moreover, such tendency is relatively moderate at low rates. However, at high rates it is accentuated. For the 0.51% fiber content, the dynamic increase factors of the flexural strength and the fracture energy are approximately 6 and 3, while for the 1.23% fiber content, they are around 4 and 2, respectively. Thus, the higher the fiber content the less rate sensitivity there is.

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