Journal of Engineering and Technological Sciences
Vol. 53 No. 2 (2021)

Tension Stiffening Behavior of Polypropylene Fiber- Reinforced Concrete Tension Members

Aris Aryanto (Department of Civil Engineering, Institut Teknologi Bandung, Jalan Ganesha No.10 Bandung 40132,)
Berto Juergen Winata (Department of Civil Engineering, Institut Teknologi Bandung, Jalan Ganesha No. 10 Bandung 40132)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 Apr 2021

Abstract

This paper focuses on comparing the behavior of RC tension members with and without the addition of polypropylene fibers at various corrosion levels. Eight cylindrical tensile specimens were tested to evaluate their tension-stiffening and cracking behavior. The content of polypropylene fiber added into the concrete mix was the main variable (0.25%, 0.50%, 0.75%, and 1.0% of total volume). The corrosion level was varied from slight (5%), medium (10%) to severe (30%) and, like the other variables, applied only to 1.0% polypropylene fiber-reinforced concrete (PFRC) specimens. The test results showed that the fiber addition significantly increased the tension-stiffening effect but was largely unable to reduce the effect of bond degradation caused by corrosion. Moreover, the addition of polypropylene fibers was able to improve the cracking behavior in terms of crack propagation, as shown by smaller crack spacing compared to the specimen without fiber addition at the same corrosion level.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

JETS

Publisher

Subject

Engineering

Description

Journal of Engineering and Technological Sciences welcomes full research articles in the area of Engineering Sciences from the following subject areas: Aerospace Engineering, Biotechnology, Chemical Engineering, Civil Engineering, Electrical Engineering, Engineering Physics, Environmental ...