Flexural behavior of hollow self compacted mortar ferrocement beam reinforced by GFRP bars

This study aimed to investigate a form of ferrocement that was a hollow ferrocement beam of self-compacting mortar reinforced with various types of metallic (steel bars, steel wire mesh) and non-metallic (GFRP bars, fiber glass mesh) reinforcement. The experimental program comprised casting twenty f...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Qutaiba Najm Abdullah, Aziz I. Abdulla
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2022-12-01
Series:Case Studies in Construction Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221450952200688X
_version_ 1811239045238358016
author Qutaiba Najm Abdullah
Aziz I. Abdulla
author_facet Qutaiba Najm Abdullah
Aziz I. Abdulla
author_sort Qutaiba Najm Abdullah
collection DOAJ
description This study aimed to investigate a form of ferrocement that was a hollow ferrocement beam of self-compacting mortar reinforced with various types of metallic (steel bars, steel wire mesh) and non-metallic (GFRP bars, fiber glass mesh) reinforcement. The experimental program comprised casting twenty ferrocement beams with dimensions of 150 × 225 × 2000 mm, incorporating 50 mm of ferrocement thickness and a polystyrene cork core of 50 × 125 mm. The results showed that the hollow ferrocement beams reinforced with GFRP bars and several layers of the fiber glass mesh (one, two and three) gave higher loads by 7.51%, 9.88% and 5.15%, respectively, as well as higher energy by 4.75%, 27% and 15.10%, respectively, However, the ductility of these beams was reduced by 37.84%, 37.33%, and 44.27%, when compared to beams reinforced with steel bars and several layers of steel wire mesh (one, two and three). These beams gave lower first crack loads, high deflections, and wide cracks with no control on crack width compared to beams reinforced with steel. The increasing number of the welded wire mesh and fiber glass mesh layers increases the first crack load, ultimate load, and energy absorption by 20%, 30.25% and 69.2%, respectively, in the ferrocement beams reinforced with (steel bars and steel wire mesh) and 34.36%, 27.1% and 94.92% respectively, in the ferrocement beams reinforced with (GFRB bars and fiber glass mesh) when three layers of mesh were used compared to beams reinforced with bars only without mesh. Also, the study shows that steel wire mesh and fiber glass mesh materials were better at controlling crack width than beams reinforced with bars only without wire mesh. The results showed that the theoretical calculations based on strain and force distribution assumptions that the theoretical and experimental ultimate loads of the beams reinforced with steel were acceptable, with a ratio ranging from 0.98 to 1.12. But, in the beams reinforced with GFRP, the theoretical and experimental ultimate loads of the beams were varied and spaced clearly with a ratio that ranged from 0.82 to 1.36. The study showed that the hollow ferrocement beams reinforced with steel bars and steel wire mesh layers were more efficient than beams reinforced with GFRP bars and fiber glass mesh.
first_indexed 2024-04-12T12:52:51Z
format Article
id doaj.art-b5d6ae9cc1e34d8e803d0e3edf6d01a6
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2214-5095
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-12T12:52:51Z
publishDate 2022-12-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Case Studies in Construction Materials
spelling doaj.art-b5d6ae9cc1e34d8e803d0e3edf6d01a62022-12-22T03:32:25ZengElsevierCase Studies in Construction Materials2214-50952022-12-0117e01556Flexural behavior of hollow self compacted mortar ferrocement beam reinforced by GFRP barsQutaiba Najm Abdullah0Aziz I. Abdulla1Corresponding author.; Civil Eng. Dept., College of Engineering, Tikrit University, IraqCivil Eng. Dept., College of Engineering, Tikrit University, IraqThis study aimed to investigate a form of ferrocement that was a hollow ferrocement beam of self-compacting mortar reinforced with various types of metallic (steel bars, steel wire mesh) and non-metallic (GFRP bars, fiber glass mesh) reinforcement. The experimental program comprised casting twenty ferrocement beams with dimensions of 150 × 225 × 2000 mm, incorporating 50 mm of ferrocement thickness and a polystyrene cork core of 50 × 125 mm. The results showed that the hollow ferrocement beams reinforced with GFRP bars and several layers of the fiber glass mesh (one, two and three) gave higher loads by 7.51%, 9.88% and 5.15%, respectively, as well as higher energy by 4.75%, 27% and 15.10%, respectively, However, the ductility of these beams was reduced by 37.84%, 37.33%, and 44.27%, when compared to beams reinforced with steel bars and several layers of steel wire mesh (one, two and three). These beams gave lower first crack loads, high deflections, and wide cracks with no control on crack width compared to beams reinforced with steel. The increasing number of the welded wire mesh and fiber glass mesh layers increases the first crack load, ultimate load, and energy absorption by 20%, 30.25% and 69.2%, respectively, in the ferrocement beams reinforced with (steel bars and steel wire mesh) and 34.36%, 27.1% and 94.92% respectively, in the ferrocement beams reinforced with (GFRB bars and fiber glass mesh) when three layers of mesh were used compared to beams reinforced with bars only without mesh. Also, the study shows that steel wire mesh and fiber glass mesh materials were better at controlling crack width than beams reinforced with bars only without wire mesh. The results showed that the theoretical calculations based on strain and force distribution assumptions that the theoretical and experimental ultimate loads of the beams reinforced with steel were acceptable, with a ratio ranging from 0.98 to 1.12. But, in the beams reinforced with GFRP, the theoretical and experimental ultimate loads of the beams were varied and spaced clearly with a ratio that ranged from 0.82 to 1.36. The study showed that the hollow ferrocement beams reinforced with steel bars and steel wire mesh layers were more efficient than beams reinforced with GFRP bars and fiber glass mesh.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221450952200688XGFRP reinforcementSteel reinforcementSelf compacting mortarHollow ferrocement beamsUltimate loadsDuctility
spellingShingle Qutaiba Najm Abdullah
Aziz I. Abdulla
Flexural behavior of hollow self compacted mortar ferrocement beam reinforced by GFRP bars
Case Studies in Construction Materials
GFRP reinforcement
Steel reinforcement
Self compacting mortar
Hollow ferrocement beams
Ultimate loads
Ductility
title Flexural behavior of hollow self compacted mortar ferrocement beam reinforced by GFRP bars
title_full Flexural behavior of hollow self compacted mortar ferrocement beam reinforced by GFRP bars
title_fullStr Flexural behavior of hollow self compacted mortar ferrocement beam reinforced by GFRP bars
title_full_unstemmed Flexural behavior of hollow self compacted mortar ferrocement beam reinforced by GFRP bars
title_short Flexural behavior of hollow self compacted mortar ferrocement beam reinforced by GFRP bars
title_sort flexural behavior of hollow self compacted mortar ferrocement beam reinforced by gfrp bars
topic GFRP reinforcement
Steel reinforcement
Self compacting mortar
Hollow ferrocement beams
Ultimate loads
Ductility
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221450952200688X
work_keys_str_mv AT qutaibanajmabdullah flexuralbehaviorofhollowselfcompactedmortarferrocementbeamreinforcedbygfrpbars
AT aziziabdulla flexuralbehaviorofhollowselfcompactedmortarferrocementbeamreinforcedbygfrpbars