TY - JOUR
T1 - Influence of multi-scale fiber on residual compressive properties of a novel rubberized concrete subjected to elevated temperatures
AU - Zhang, Yao
AU - Zhang, Shaoqi
AU - Zhao, Weigang
AU - Jiang, Xi
AU - Chen, Yibo
AU - Hou, Jinxin
AU - Wang, Yichao
AU - Yan, Zhiguo
AU - Zhu, Hehua
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors acknowledge the financial support from the National Natural Science Foundation of China ( 52108379 , 51908504 ), Youth Top Talent Program, Education Department of Hebei Province ( BJK2022047 ), Natural Science Foundation of Hebei Province ( E2021210002 , E2021210055 , E2022210005 ), the Science and Technology Research Project of Colleges and Universities in Hebei Province ( ZD2022073 ), Scientific Research Foundation for the Returned Overseas Scholars, Hebei Province ( C20210307 ), and Innovation Research Group Program of Natural Science, Hebei Province ( E2021210099 ).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022
PY - 2023/4/15
Y1 - 2023/4/15
N2 - Green and environment-friendly rubberized concrete has attracted extensive attention from scholars worldwide. However, the incorporation of crumb rubber can weaken the mechanical properties of concrete, particularly when it is subjected to elevated temperatures. To improve the residual compressive performance of rubberized concrete, a novel multi-scale fiber reinforced rubberized concrete (MSFRRC) is developed by adding calcium carbonate whiskers, polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) fibers, and steel fibers. In this study, 10%, 20%, and 30% of the sands are substituted by the same volume of crumb rubber with sizes between 0.4 mm and 0.8 mm. The impacts of the crumb rubber content and multi-scale fiber on the residual Young's modulus, axial compressive strength, peak strain, stress-strain curve, and compressive toughness of MSFRRC after being heated up to various temperature levels (25 °C, 200 °C, 400 °C, 600 °C, and 800 °C) are discussed. Also, the failure mode combined with the acoustic emission technology and the thermal effect on the microstructure of rubberized concrete specimens, are investigated. Results reveal that incorporating multi-scale fiber can effectively restrain the development of cracks and explosive spalling under high temperatures. Besides, it can cover the strength loss caused by crumb rubber and impose a positive effect on resisting thermal damage. The compressive strength of MSFRRC can be enhanced by about 5.4%–19% with the incorporation of different fibers. The results show that specimens without fibers suddenly fail once the peak stress is reached and exhibit brittle fracture. However, the brittleness can be improved by adding multi-scale fibers. It can be observed that, after exposure to 800 °C, the damage of MSFRRC can develop at the early loading stage and develop in the whole loading process, showing a relatively ductile fracture. Meanwhile, the pore structure can be refined by adding CaCO3 whiskers and the addition of multi-scale fibers can slightly increase the porosity and cannot restrain the heating-induced pore coarsening. Furthermore, the empirical formulas to predict the residual stress-strain relation of MSFRRC under uniaxial compression are proposed by considering crumb rubber, multi-scale fibers, and high temperature.
AB - Green and environment-friendly rubberized concrete has attracted extensive attention from scholars worldwide. However, the incorporation of crumb rubber can weaken the mechanical properties of concrete, particularly when it is subjected to elevated temperatures. To improve the residual compressive performance of rubberized concrete, a novel multi-scale fiber reinforced rubberized concrete (MSFRRC) is developed by adding calcium carbonate whiskers, polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) fibers, and steel fibers. In this study, 10%, 20%, and 30% of the sands are substituted by the same volume of crumb rubber with sizes between 0.4 mm and 0.8 mm. The impacts of the crumb rubber content and multi-scale fiber on the residual Young's modulus, axial compressive strength, peak strain, stress-strain curve, and compressive toughness of MSFRRC after being heated up to various temperature levels (25 °C, 200 °C, 400 °C, 600 °C, and 800 °C) are discussed. Also, the failure mode combined with the acoustic emission technology and the thermal effect on the microstructure of rubberized concrete specimens, are investigated. Results reveal that incorporating multi-scale fiber can effectively restrain the development of cracks and explosive spalling under high temperatures. Besides, it can cover the strength loss caused by crumb rubber and impose a positive effect on resisting thermal damage. The compressive strength of MSFRRC can be enhanced by about 5.4%–19% with the incorporation of different fibers. The results show that specimens without fibers suddenly fail once the peak stress is reached and exhibit brittle fracture. However, the brittleness can be improved by adding multi-scale fibers. It can be observed that, after exposure to 800 °C, the damage of MSFRRC can develop at the early loading stage and develop in the whole loading process, showing a relatively ductile fracture. Meanwhile, the pore structure can be refined by adding CaCO3 whiskers and the addition of multi-scale fibers can slightly increase the porosity and cannot restrain the heating-induced pore coarsening. Furthermore, the empirical formulas to predict the residual stress-strain relation of MSFRRC under uniaxial compression are proposed by considering crumb rubber, multi-scale fibers, and high temperature.
KW - Calcium carbonate
KW - Compressive behavior
KW - High temperatures
KW - Multi-scale fibers
KW - Polyvinyl alcohol fibers
KW - Rubberized concrete
KW - Steel fibers
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85144619945&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jobe.2022.105750
DO - 10.1016/j.jobe.2022.105750
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85144619945
SN - 2352-7102
VL - 65
JO - Journal of Building Engineering
JF - Journal of Building Engineering
M1 - 105750
ER -