Title of article :
Flexural strengthening of concrete beams using CFRP, GFRP and hybrid FRP sheets
Author/Authors :
Attari، نويسنده , , N. and Amziane، نويسنده , , S. and Chemrouk، نويسنده , , M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Abstract :
The use of composite materials such as fibre reinforced polymers in strengthening and repairing of structural elements, particularly those made of reinforced concrete, is widely spreading. However, for successful and cost-effective applications, engineers must improve their knowledge with respect to the actual behaviour of strengthened structures. Therefore, glass fibre reinforced polymers, because they are more ductile and cheaper than carbon fibres, can be considered as an alternative solution to repair and strengthen concrete elements.
esent study is conducted to examine the efficiency of external strengthening systems for reinforced concrete beams using FRP fabric (Glass–Carbon). In order to address this problem, different strengthening configurations are considered (use of separate unidirectional glass and carbon fibres with some U-anchorages or of bidirectional glass–carbon fibre hybrid fabric).
l of seven flexural strengthened reinforced concrete beams are instrumented and tested under repeated loading sequences using a 4-point bending device to complete a failure analysis. The results for strength, stiffness, ductility and failure modes are discussed for the various strengthening solutions considered. An analytical model to predict the flexural failure of strengthened concrete elements is also developed. The results demonstrate that the model predicts strengthened concrete beam behaviour under applied loads accurately. The present tests also reveal the cost-effectiveness of twin layer glass–carbon FRP fabric as a strengthening configuration for reinforced concrete structures.
Keywords :
FRP , Reinforced concrete , Repair , ductility , analytical model , strengthening
Journal title :
Construction and Building Materials
Journal title :
Construction and Building Materials