Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
817567 | Composites Part B: Engineering | 2015 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
This research investigates the electromechanical damage-sensing behavior of strain-hardening steel fiber-reinforced cement composites (SH-SFRCs) with six types of steel fibers (1.5% volume fraction content) within an identical mortar matrix (90Â MPa). The six types of steel fibers studied are long twisted (T30/0.3), long smooth (S30/0.3), long hooked (H30/0.375), medium twisted (T20/0.2), medium smooth (S19/0.2), and short smooth (S13/0.2) steel fibers. The damage-sensing behavior was evaluated by measuring the changes in the electrical resistance during direct tensile tests. The electrical resistivity of the SH-SFRCs clearly decreased as the tensile strain increased until the post-cracking point, owing to the generation of multiple micro-cracks during strain-hardening. All the SH-SFRCs investigated had nominal gauge factors ranging between 50 and 140; these values are much higher than the commercially conventional gauge factor, which involves metal and is around 2. Both T30/0.3 and T20/0.2 produced the highest gauge factor, i.e., the best damage-sensing capacity, whereas S13/0.2 produced the highest electrical conductivity.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Engineering (General)
Authors
Duy Liem Nguyen, Jiandong Song, Chatchai Manathamsombat, Dong Joo Kim,