4.5 Article

Triaxial compression of sand reinforced with fibers

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ASCE-AMER SOC CIVIL ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1061/(ASCE)1090-0241(2003)129:2(125)

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triaxial compression; sand; fiber-reinforced materials

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Results from drained triaxial compression tests on specimens of fiber-reinforced sand are reported. It is evident that the addition of a small amount of synthetic fibers increases the failure stress of the composite. This effect, however, is associated with a drop in initial stiffness and an increase in strain to failure. Steel fibers did not reduce initial stiffness of the composite. The increase in failure stress can be as much as 70% at a fiber concentration of 2% (by volume) and an aspect ratio of 85. The reinforcement benefit increases with an increase in fiber concentration and aspect ratio, but it also depends on the relative size of the grains and fiber length. A larger reinforcement effect in terms of the peak shear stress was found in fine sand, compared to coarse sand, when the fiber concentration was small (0.5%). This trend was reversed for a larger fiber concentration (1.5%). A model for prediction of the failure stress in triaxial compression was developed. The failure envelope has two segments: a linear part associated with fiber slip, and a nonlinear one related to yielding of the fiber material. The analysis indicates that yielding of fibers occurs well beyond the stress range encountered in practice. The concept of a macroscopic internal friction angle was introduced to describe the failure criterion of a fiber-reinforced sand. This concept is a straightforward way to include fiber reinforcement in stability analyses of earth structures.

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