Fresh and hardened properties of 3D printable polymer fibre-reinforced high-performance cementitious composite

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-37
Author(s):  
Luong Pham ◽  
Biranchi Panda ◽  
Phuong Tran
2016 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 491-503 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fang Yuan ◽  
Jinlong Pan ◽  
Christopher KY Leung

Engineered cementitious composite is a class of high-performance cementitious composites with pseudo-strain hardening behavior and excellent crack control capacity. Substitution of concrete with engineered cementitious composite can greatly reduce the cracking and durability problems associated with low tensile strength and brittleness of concrete and can significantly increase structural seismic resistance. In this article, a pair of beam–column joints with various matrix types has been tested under reversed cyclic loading to study the effect of substitution of concrete with engineered cementitious composite in the joint zone on the seismic behaviors of composite members. After that, a simplified constitutive model of engineered cementitious composite under cyclic loading is proposed, and the structural performance of steel reinforced engineered cementitious composite members is simulated by fiber beam elements. The accuracy of the model is verified with test data. Finally, three frame structures with different matrixes subjected to earthquake actions were numerically modeled to verify the contribution of ductile engineered cementitious composite material to structural seismic resistance. The seismic responses or failure mechanisms, deformation patterns, and energy dissipation capacities for each frame structure are analyzed and compared. The simulation results indicate that the application of engineered cementitious composite can reduce the maximum story drift ratio, and the distributions of the dissipated energy are more uniform along the building height when engineered cementitious composite is strategically used in ground columns and beam–column joints of the frame structure. The seismic performance of the reinforced engineered cementitious composite-concrete composite frame is found to be even better than the frame with all concrete replaced by engineered cementitious composite.


2014 ◽  
Vol 507 ◽  
pp. 242-244
Author(s):  
Kyung Joon Shin

Cracking is one of the most important factors in the serviceability as well as durability performance of concrete structures. Recently, it was recognized that a high performance fiber-reinforced cementitious composite (HPFRCC) provides a possible solution to this inherent problem of cracking by smearing one or several dominant cracks into many distributed microcracks. The purpose of the present study is to explore the ductility characteristics of HPFRCC. The permeability of HPFRCC after subjected to different load levels were measured to identify the effect of reduced cracking among the mixtures. It was confined that the permeability of proposed mixtures was lower than that without microfibers. This means that the proposed materials can reduce the crack width greatly at the same applied loads


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document