Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6719357 Construction and Building Materials 2016 15 Pages PDF
Abstract
Twenty four steel fiber reinforced high strength concrete beams without stirrups and with stirrups were tested in bending under two concentrated loads; the concrete beams were designed to have a pronounced shear behavior. The possibility of replacing traditional transverse reinforcement by steel fibers was studied. In this sense, the main testing parameters were the volume fraction of steel fibers, the aspect ratio of fibers and the presence of stirrups; five volume fractions of fibers were used (0%; 0.5%; 1.0%; 2.0% and 3.0%), with two aspect ratios (lf/df of 65 and 80). The experimental results show that the shear behavior of the fiber reinforced high strength concrete beams without stirrups is similar, if not better, to that of high strength concrete beams containing stirrups reinforcement. The fiber reinforced beams had very narrow diagonal cracks and improved shear strengths, particularly for fiber fractions from 1% to 3%. Based on the present experimental work, a new empirical model is proposed for the contribution of the fibers to the shear strength of high strength concrete beams. The proposed model was assessed against other existing models and against varied experimental data taken from the literature and found relatively more satisfactory.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Civil and Structural Engineering
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